Relative difficulty: (way too) Easy
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| [54D: Wielder of a red lightsaber] |
Theme answers:
- DEATH ON THE NILE (24A: The Ten Plagues)
- A TALE OF TWO CITIES (31A: Sodom and Gomorrah)
- DANGEROUS LIAISONS (49A: Samson and Delilah)
- WHERE THE WILD THINGS ARE (66A: Noah's Ark)
- THE AGE OF INNOCENCE (85A: Garden of Eden)
- THE PRINCE OF TIDES (103A: Moses Parting the Red Sea)
- THE GREAT ESCAPE (114A: Jonah and the Whale)
Paul Erdős (Hungarian: Erdős Pál [ˈɛrdøːʃ ˈpaːl]; 26 March 1913 – 20 September 1996) was a Hungarian mathematician. He was one of the most prolific mathematicians and producers of mathematical conjectures of the 20th century. Erdős pursued and proposed problems in discrete mathematics, graph theory, number theory, mathematical analysis, approximation theory, set theory, and probability theory. Much of his work centered on discrete mathematics, cracking many previously unsolved problems in the field. He championed and contributed to Ramsey theory, which studies the conditions in which order necessarily appears. Overall, his work leaned towards solving previously open problems, rather than developing or exploring new areas of mathematics. Erdős published around 1,500 mathematical papers during his lifetime, a figure that remains unsurpassed.
He was known both for his social practice of mathematics, working with more than 500 collaborators, and for his eccentric lifestyle; Time magazine called him "The Oddball's Oddball". He firmly believed mathematics to be a social activity, living an itinerant lifestyle with the sole purpose of writing mathematical papers with other mathematicians. He devoted his waking hours to mathematics, even into his later years; he died at a mathematics conference in Warsaw in 1996.
Erdős's prolific output with co-authors prompted the creation of the Erdős number, the number of steps in the shortest path between a mathematician and Erdős in terms of co-authorships. (wikipedia)
• • •
["... Samson & Delilah ..."]
The big weakness of the puzzle, though, wasn't the theme concept per se, but the fact that the answers were so so so easy to crack, at every turn. In fact, I don't think I looked at a single theme clue after the first couple, because I didn't have to. The rest of the puzzle was childishly easy, Monday easy, so I just zipped through it and when I saw a book title take shape in the long Acrosses, I just filled it in. Again, only THE GREAT ESCAPE took any effort, and then only because I didn't know it was a book. I know it must get tiresome hearing me talk about how the puzzle has been radically defanged in recent years. They must have data somewhere that tells them exactly what difficulty level promotes "engagement." Maybe "today's audiences" are impatient and don't like to experience failure, so in the interest of promoting "engagement," the steepness of the weeklong difficulty ramp has been (drastically) reduced. I don't know. I just know it's a drag to walk through a Sunday-sized grid where there's absolutely no resistance. Today was particularly bad, as the puzzle wasn't just easy, it was boring, and filled with musty answers, many of which I had presumed dead. I physically recoiled at stuff like ONENO and INRI and ONEL and ERTE, stuff every old-timer knows instinctively, but that reeks of mothballs by now. IRED!? Ugh, my most hated of never-was-a-word "words." The crosswordese (OPAH ARLO EDIE ILSA ICEE ACELA AROD COSI etc.) just swamps this puzzle, and the stuff that's not crosswordese gets only the most boring and straightforward of clues. A puzzle has a right to be easy (on occasion); it has no right to be dull.
Here is all the "difficulty" I encountered: Blanked on ERDOS, Vice President of the Crossword Mathematician's Club (second-in-command to President EULER). Because I blanked on ERDOS, I faltered on D.O.A. (46A: Hopeless from the start, for short). Let's see, what else? I ... hmmm ... I wrote in EXALT before EXTOL, so there's that (19D: Glorify). Oh, I had a little trouble with HAT TREES, as I would never call them that (they're "hat racks") and (more importantly) I had no idea the answer would be in the plural (86D: Where boaters hang with bowlers). Yes, there are multiple hats in the clue, but multiple hats can hang on a single hat rack (or HAT TREE, if you insist), so there's no reason I should've been looking for the plural there. Shoes have trees, hats have racks, thank you for maintaining this distinction! Anyway, that's it. I don't see a single other area of the puzzle that gave me any trouble. Not a one. And on a Sunday-sized grid? Big ol' grid with absolutely zero fight in it. Extremely disappointing.
[Saw this (amazing) movie yesterday at Cinemapolis in Ithaca, after seeing Send Help (2026) at my local REGAL movie theater on Friday (102D: Big name in movie theaters)]
- 6A: Setting for a landscape (CANVAS) — one of the more clever, inventive, and interesting clues in the puzzle. The clue wording is ambiguous, so that you don't really know what you're looking at ... and then you realize you're looking at a painting.
- 45D: New Yorkie, say (PUP) — again, more like this! More cuteness. A little play on words, a little dog, that's what I'm talking about.
- 76A: Like Constantinople, in 1930 (RENAMED) — this wasn't "hard," but it didn't come to me right away. I think I was looking for something more dramatic, like INVADED or RETAKEN or something. Why'd they change Constantinople to Istanbul? I can’t say. I guess people just liked it better that way.
- 93A: Get the ___ (finally become aware) (MEMO) — more clues like this! This actually made me have to think. And work the crosses. And then when I got it, I was satisfied, not annoyed. Extremely straightforward clues are an important part of any puzzle (people need toeholds), but this puzzle desperately needed more playful clues like this.
- 22D: ___ Stark, "Game of Thrones" patriarch (NED) — I am an inveterate GOT non-watcher. I tried, it didn't take, The End. But my student Carmelo insisted that the new GOT spin-off, A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms, was worth my attention, so I put it on yesterday and damned if I didn't enjoy it. Laughed a lot. No dragons or magic or rape or incest so far, just an adorable lunk of a man (Ser Dunk!) trying to prove to everyone that he's actually a "knight." And so far I haven't needed to know a damn thing about the original GOT to enjoy it. I'm only one episode in, but so far: recommended.
- 81D: One making an impression? (MIMIC) — really disappointed to find out this wasn't MONET. That "M" had me so sure ...
That's all. See you next time.
P.S. two new crossword tournament announcements landed in my inbox this weekend.
- Registration for the Boswords 2026 Spring Themeless League (starting Mar. 2) is now open:
This 10-week event starts with a Preseason puzzle on Monday, March 2 and features weekly themeless puzzles -- clued at three levels of difficulty -- from an all-star roster of constructors and are edited by Brad Wilber. To register, to solve a practice puzzle, to view the constructor line-up, and to learn more, go to www.boswords.org.
- Registration for Westwords 2026 is also now open. This tournament is both in-person (Berkeley, CA, June 14, 2026) and online.
Westwords 2026 will feature six competition puzzles, four themed and two freestyle (themeless), ranging in difficulty from easy breezy 💐 to very challenging 😈. The final puzzle will be offered at two different difficulty levels. All six puzzles will contribute to solvers' overall score and placement — in other words, the last puzzle will not be scored separately. // The tournament, both in-person and online, will run from 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Pacific on Sunday, June 14. In-person solvers will be able to arrive at 10 to sign in and socialize. The day will include a 75-minute lunch break.[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook and Letterboxd]
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ReplyDeleteEasy. Very Easy. Didn't read the theme clues, and in going over the puzzle post-solve found a number of other answers where I hadn't read the clues.
* * _ _ _
Overwrites:
At 10D, ASH caN before BIN
My 26A freeze was a HoLd before it was a HALT
I mixed up my lightsaber colors and briefly had jedi instead of SITH at 54D
yuM before MMM at 91A
When I rush uncontrollably I CAREEn, not CAREER (109A)
Misread the 177D clue as "Enero o diciembre" and so had mes before AÑO
One WOE:
Mathematician Paul ERDOS at 36D
Rush uncontrolledly? Career? What the heck?! It had to be career but I was also getting crossed up by hat trees. But that had to be as well. Oh well, I finished without using any hints. That corner just annoyed me.
DeleteSí, claro. Mi ojo. {I don't think "my eye" is an idiom in Spanish, and I'm not sure why it's one in English.}
ReplyDeleteCute theme. Uninspired fill. With this many threes, fours, and fives, they better have a sense of humor, and this one didn't. Maybe lose a few black squares?
🦖 adds "childishly" to our group's -LY EASY Hall of Fame: absurdly, childishly, insultingly, extremely, embarrassingly, preposterously, really, and terribly.
I did not know CAREER can mean to rush forward. For me it's a synonym for "What happened to me? I showed so much promise, and yet, look."
People: 20 {that's a lot}
Places: 4
Products: 9
Partials: 10
Foreignisms: 4
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 47 of 140 (34%)
Funny Factor: 2 🤨
Tee-Hee: Coxswain.
Uniclues:
1 "Ugly heads are righteous."
2 Let's call 'eating ice cream cones in bed' a Tattling Arlo.
1 EXTOL RATTY HAT TREES
2 LAY LICK RENAMED
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Anti-dentite. MILK DUDS COACH.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
“Mi ojo” existe, pero no es una expresión muy usada. Lo normal sería decir “sí, claro…” con tono sarcástico.
DeleteLaughing out loud thank you!
Delete@Gary, somehow you overlooked my "disappointingly" :)
DeleteGary, possibly "my eye" refers to the gesture of pulling down the corner of one eye to indicate disbelief? Old cockney thing maybe?
Delete“and yet, look.” Laughing out loud!!
DeleteTengo mucho ojo.
DeleteVery easy, yes. I liked it better than Rex did, maybe because the theme was historically focused and relatively free of pop-culture entries.
ReplyDeleteLike Gary, I never knew this meaning of CAREER: “move rapidly, go at full speed: The sports car careered down the highway.; vocation, lifework, livelihood: She has made a career of interior decoration.”
ReplyDeleteNot to be confused with:
CAREEN – lean or tip to one side while in motion, as car rounding a curve or a ship listing in a storm: The motorcycle careened around the bend in the road.
Learned something every day. That means I can go back to bed now. 😁
Same. I really wanted CAREEN. Never heard of CAREER used this way, although either could apply to eras in my CAREER, figuratively speaking.
DeleteA senior editor at the paper I worked for used to send out memos about common mistakes. Careen/CAREER showed up about once a month.
DeleteI finished the puzzle in a trice, then spent almost as long looking for my mistake at HATTNEES. Thanks for the vocabulary lesson, Stuart. Like you, I can go back to bed now.
DeleteI know CAREER as a verb because it has appeared fairly often in the Times puzzle. Otherwise I probably wouldn’t have remembered it. I get the impression the Times people prefer career to careen. Les S. Moore. Editors may balk at treating the 2 words the same way, but people do it all the time and will continue to do so. My solution is to never use career (verb).
DeleteAgreed. Way too easy. 14 seconds off a record Sunday. Like others, didn't even look at the clues for many entries. Once the theme was uncovered for the first time it was just a case of extrapolating extremely well known titles from the letters already entered to solve the all too facile fill.
ReplyDeleteI was stumped by yesterday’s northwest section of the puzzle.Today’s puzzle was terrific.It was light, fun and enjoyable. The theme and the fill were good and put me in a good mood as a puzzle should.🎈🎈🎊🎊
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed the theme, but not for very long as the puzzle was done in a trice.
ReplyDeleteWell, actually I was a little slow to get started, as I had a typo entering CAtEd instead of CADET, which made 24A really hard to make sense of, as it began with TEATH. Once I saw my error and filled in the first theme answer, it was all frifly easy.
@kitshef 7:00 AM
Delete🤣 I have Googled "frifly" twice thanks to you. I guess it's not a thing ... and you're making fetch happen?
Too easy, but well made. And we can never escape Mel Ott. And Arlo Guthrie.
ReplyDeleteYikes. Painfully easy. Painfully dull. Just sad all around.
ReplyDeleteSir Paul
DeleteThey justified the OTT answer because the clue was the Mets. Usually, it is a reference to the Giants. I knew right away. Baseball player 3 letters Mets took a lot of old players when they were founded. So immediately assumed OTT. So the trick didn’t work!
Ridiculously easy. I start at the bottom right...I do it on paper... so The Great Escape was my first themer. I assumed they'd all be movies and that "books" pertained to books in the Bible. Didn't matter. No resistance anywhere....
ReplyDeleteOh, that’s a fun theme. The concept alone – coming up with book titles that describe biblical events – is a fun game to me. Guessing the theme answers from their clues with as few crosses as possible, I got a kick out of that.
ReplyDeleteIt kept me in a good mood from start to finish.
The freshness of the theme idea was matched by the freshness of its answers. Four of those seven book titles are NYT answer debuts. How can WHERE THE WILD THINGS ARE never have appeared in a Times puzzle? But it hasn’t until today! Of the remaining three answers, one has appeared only once before, and two twice. That’s serious pop in the box. That makes a puzzle fun too.
My heart warms at the backstory – two long-time co-workers and crossword solvers decide during covid to try making puzzles, and now they’ve had three in the Times. Their first, by the way, a Sunday (9/17/23), was also a fun game.
I had a sweet time playing your game today, Jill and Michelle. Thank you!
Wonderful and clever. Fully enjoyed.
DeleteIt’s been awhile—I don’t dip in here as often as I did during lockdown. Love that Lewis still finds nice things to say every day about every puzzle—so refreshingly optimistic that he makes me happy. As for me, I’ll always be a newbie I guess, so I still love every puzzle that I finish without looking anything up. So I love this one. And btw, maybe there’s a little more to it than some thought—every theme answer is ALSO a movie! 😎
Delete@Lewis, what you said! Especially about work-friends. And lawyer-work-friends to boot! Knowing from experience what an absolute grind a law firm life can be, this friendship based Sunday was a treat.
DeleteSeriously?
ReplyDeleteThis was even faster than my all-time fastest Sunday of a few weeks back. And both of them way way way faster than a normal Sunday.
Nice to see Mel OTT make a comeback after a long absence (Bobby ORR next week, perhaps?), and to see yet another way to clue Yoko ONO (will they ever run out?), but filling in the theme answers required just a scant few crosses and a rudimentary knowledge of the names of well-known books of the 19th and 20th centuries.
And finally, I always feel sad about those forgotten fencers who wield foils and sabres. How about imposing the equal time rule here?
[Popular request at the biblical wedding feast where water was turned into whiskey]
ReplyDeleteMIRACLE ON ICE
❤️
DeleteI appreciate the interpretive effort of the theme - it’s cute and works in places - but Rex nailed it on some of them - I knew some of them as movies only not books. Title is apt and I like the central spanning themer.
ReplyDeleteSuburban RHONDA
Overall fill was fine for the most part - the big guy highlights the good stuff. TATTLING, IRISES, CELIBRATE are all solid. Love to see ED but as always don’t like the full proper name in a grid. Learned ATLANTA.
IRON and Wine and Calexico
Knight of the Seven Kingdomshas been wonderful so far - true to the Tales of Dunk and Egg.
@okanaganer - we still seem to be getting your normal winter - 18-24” forecast for tonight and tomorrow. From your reports it sounds like things may be changing for you soon.
Rave on John DONNE, rave on thy holy fool
Incredibly straightforward and simple but an enjoyable enough Sunday morning solve. Now to watch hockey.
Samson and Delilah 12/31/78
@Son Volt 7:27 am... last Monday it snowed all day, but quickly melted, and we've had nothing since then. The forecast has been flurries and showers every day, but it just doesn't happen!
DeleteLess than 20 minutes for me, so yeah, that was a nice, fun, straightforward Sunday, clued like a Tuesday. Loved the theme, thought it was very clever, and not too much junk! Thanks, Jill and Michelle! : )
ReplyDeleteHey All !
ReplyDeleteThe Old Testament to the New Testament?
CHANGING TIMES
My book! 😁Available wherever you get your books online. Search for Darrin Vail.
Agree easiness of puz, some funky looking Blocker patterns, a lot of shorter fill. But, still enjoyable figuring out the Bible things to the corresponding books.
82 Blockers, normal max 78. So a few extra hanging around. Is ONE NO by itself actually said in Bridge? Or is it ONE NO bid, or ONE NO trump? Hello (as @pablo would say) to old friend INRI, its been a minute.Also MOET.
Nice puz that didn't tax the few remaining brain cells. Always a good thing.
Have a great Sunday!
Six F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
You wrote a book?
DeleteI'm hoping that was sarcasm, @Anon, because everyone knows I plug it here at least once a week! 😁
DeleteBut yes, I did, if it wasn't sarcasm.
RooMonster Published Author *Pats self on back*
Well, huh. Just saw I got my Personal Best time today! (The NYT site keeps the clock a-ticking, I don't pay attention to it normally, and don't try to speed-solve.) How do you like them apples? 19:30. Yay me! 😁
ReplyDeleteRoo
Roo
DeleteFWIW one no is a common short hand in bridge. As you inferred, short for one no trump.
dgd, maybe actual bridge players use ONE NO, but back in the day, when papers ran a daily section on bridge (which I read, hoping someday to play it), bids were summarized by the four players, dubbed North, East, South and West. A bid of, say, one no trump, was abbreviated 1NT, neither spelling out the number nor using NO for NT.
DeleteThat said, I am all for an answer that can be read as NO TRUMP.
Enjoyed this but agree this was Monday-level easy.
ReplyDelete@Stuart, 6:48 AM and @Gary, 6:27 AM: I vaguely knew CAREER didn't just mean that meaningful, long-term job. Had CAREER then thought about CAREEN then saw that CAREEN wouldn't work.
I was OK with HATTREES: My in-laws have such a tree near their front door, used for both coats and hats. Hardly a rack; it just doesn't seem like a "rack".
Re-do's:
- 2D: Had BARAT instead of BORAT at first.
- 39A crossing with 34D: Had SOON before ANON, but neither ONEL or LONE (as in, "el-1") would work.
- 77D: DANK before DAMP. I still remember the first time I learned the word "dank" was in middle school when we had to read David Copperfield: This was used to describe Uriah Heep's hand. Never forgot that image.
For those of us in the Northeast: Please stay safe and warm!
@Lewis. When I need to read something blindly optimistic that exhibits almost toxic positivity I can always turn to you. I love OFL’s rants at times just to read your comments and see how you’ve seen nothing but good in the puzzle. Don’t stop, please.
ReplyDeleteYes, very easy. 17 minutes and most of that was typing in the letters. Pleased with myself that I know of Paul Erdos. Very interesting guy.
ReplyDeleteVery easy for me, too. Liked the themers. WHERE THE WILD THINGS ARE as clued gave me a chuckle.
ReplyDeleteTo quote OFL: “A puzzle has a right to be easy (on occasion); it has no right to be dull.”
ReplyDeleteI’m pledging here and now to stop complaining about easy puzzles, as long as they give me a moment of amusement. Dull puzzles, look out. Easy puzzles, like today’s, thank you for bringing a bit of pleasure to my morning.
Now, off to Bracket City.
I agree with you. With a monster storm approaching, I needed something light & breezy - like you said 'bringing a bit of pleasure to my morning :)
DeleteThe key to this one was discerning the theme, since it occupied so much real estate in the grid. I was lucky enough to piece together the first one up north, and things opened up after that.
ReplyDeleteThe one trouble spot for me occurred when I wanted CAREEn for CAREER, which made the latter part of HAT TREES extremely difficult to come up with. I even looked up CAREER to verify that it has a secondary definition of which I was unaware. I also wasn’t convinced that IRED is a word - it’s definitely a member of the “only in the NYT club”, and probably running for treasurer in fact.
😁
DeleteFor Rex: I believe Constantinople became Istanbul in recognition of Turkey's independence from the Ottoman Empire.
ReplyDeleteThis is an odd one. It was easy for me, but I am not convinced it would be easy for new solvers. For me, a lot of the easiness came from the fact that it was packed with wall-to-wall crosswordese that I had seen so many times before. I don't think new solvers would have that knowledge base, and so it would be an impenetrable wall of short answers and obscure trivia.
ReplyDeleteI thought Terrance TAO was the President of the Crossword Mathematicians Club.
ReplyDeleteMostly agree with Rex, this may be the easiest/fastest Sunday I’ve ever done, and I’ve been doing them for well over 50 years. At the same time, I think I liked it more than he did, and found it mostly a reasonably pleasant solve — despite being way too easy.
ReplyDeleteThe theme answers were loooong; two each (14, 16, 17) and the winner (21). As said by many, very clever use of book titles to represent imaginary biblical stories.
DeleteBut at what cost? 36 three-letter answers, of which only (and wonderfully) PUP stood out. III and MMM? IFS and ADS? ONO and OTT? Thirty more yet? Yikes.
Rex (two stars, versus 2-1/2) seems a bit harsher on this than normal, but the write-up supports his award.
Raise your hand if you have ERDOS number one.
ReplyDeleteNYTXW appearances:
DeleteERDOS: 9
EULER: 92
Annoyance. Things CAREEN out of control, they don't CAREER. Bad cluing there
ReplyDeleteNot correct check dictionary on both.
DeleteThanks to the TMBG song, the RENAMing is the first thing I think of INRe Constantinople.
ReplyDeleteWhile mentioning films, Four Rational People is a documentary about the final tour of the Emerson Quartet after 50 years! Of playing together. Currently in NYC at the Quad, and coming to LA soon with a Q&A. Very interesting, moving and beautiful meditation on art, community and time.
Thanks out there for the recc on this blog for The Great on Hulu - kind of fun to figure out what is actually historically based in this “occasionally true” story:) Palace intrigue is not a genre I generally enjoy, but this (like the original GOT via fantasy) mostly transcends the limits of genre.
@Gary and Chuck from yesterday: I think I’ve had some puzzles that I just abandoned for hours with the clock running, leading me to always beat my average. However, I went through a phase of solving on paper, then entering the puzzle into the app with my pianist fingers, so I never beat my best times either. “Stuck in the middle with you” song comes to mind…
Very easy, even by recent standards, but didn’t mind today.
Ddd
my issue with today’s puzzle was the clue for CAREER. I had CAREEN in there because that is literally what “rush uncontrolledly” means — this seems almost like a typo? anyone else ??
ReplyDeleteSeems like someone needs a larger vocabulary. Or a dictionary.
DeleteAnonymous 10:46 AM
DeleteWhy so insulting? Just because you are anonymous doesn’t justify it.
As soon as I saw the Istanbul clue, my first thought was “man, I’ll be disappointed if Rex doesn’t include the TMBG reference”. And, I wasn’t disappointed.
ReplyDeleteAlso, I’ve gone down the Erdos Number rabbit hole before. There’s a measure of one’s combined Erdos-Bacon number. Several mathematicians/physicists have cameos in films so have low ones. We should know about Danica McKellar and Natalie Portman (Star Wars reference), but I was surprised to learn that Colin Firth has a combined score of 6.
That song predates They Might Be Giants by many decades.
DeleteHi. I am the Anon that made the above comment. I am aware. I was aware in 1990 when Flood came out. That doesn’t change what reference I wanted.
DeleteAnonymous 10:51 AM
DeletePerhaps you should read before you criticize. No one said that TMBG originated the song.
Rex was hoping for Monet - I was hoping for Manet. Oh well.
ReplyDeleteIt's funny to think of ATLANTA being the Hollywood of the South when it is 0.3 degrees latitude south of Hollywood.
ReplyDeletePeople were confused when the First Lady of Song went to Spain. The promotional posters seemed to say "She Fitzgerald." People quizzically asked "¿y ......?"
Heading for a MEMO regarding inscriptions on crucifixes. Inre: INRI.
I've had enough of Yoko for a while. Let's make ONO a NONO for an ANO. I think I only heard ONENO, so the motion passes.
I have so much respect for Van Gogh that whenever ICEE one of his paintings IRISES.
This puzzle was better than lox on a latke! Thanks, Jill Rafaloff and Michelle Sontarp.
Great ONO ohno @egs!
DeleteRoo
My enjoyment of this puzzle lay entirely in predicting what OFL would have to say about it. 😊
ReplyDeleteWas fascinated by GOT. I want my own dragon! Will have to look up the Knight—sounds like fun. Agree this was relatively easy but still liked the humor. And you didn’t have to have read the books because the titles were so well known. Somehow to me IRED never rises to the level of fury or rage—just kinda maybe sorta a notch above annoyed. Comfortable with old friends MEL, ARLO, and ONO…not so much with ERDON but apparently he was the most outgoing mathematician ever, so kudos to him, and thanks to Rex for the learning experience.
ReplyDeleteRecord time for me! Very easy but I’ll take it
ReplyDeleteThis was pretty easy, I agree with Rex. I haven't been able to do my random solve on Sundays so I've been trying to create it on the NYT app by just jumping around on the grid and even so I finished 15 minutes sooner than a hard Sunday would take me.
ReplyDeleteI knew all of the book titles and thought they were much more apt than Rex did. And the title was GREAT. DEATH ON THE NILE, perfect, A TALE OF TWO CITIES, laughably understated, WHERE THE WILD THINGS ARE, nice, THE PRINCE OF TIDES, yes!
DRAW as clued baffled me for a while. And I double DNFed with DAnk instead of DAMP at 77D. PCP I should have seen, but 91A was first yuM, then noM and I didn't change it when ED MCMAHON showed up.
Jill and Michelle, great job on a Sunday construction!
Once again the weekend finishes with a whimper. A dialed in theme of easily recognized titles supported by mediocre fill means that my neighborhood paper's double cartoon puzzle where you find the 6 differences will offer more puzzling than the NYT's Sunday puzzle. Sad but true.
ReplyDeletere: 76A: Like Constantinople, in 1930 -- Rex, that's nobody's business but the Turks.
ReplyDeleteNah—nobody mentioned getting the works.
DeleteBesides, Constaniople is so much better than Istanbul if for no other readin than Constantine is better than Attaturk ( and no, I’m not ysing any diacritical marks on any name written in English)
CAREER (v.): “to move swiftly and in an uncontrolled way in a specified direction” (Google/Oxford Languages). I know CAREEN is more common but this meaning of CAREER isn’t exactly obscure.
ReplyDeleteAll of Samson & Delilahs LIASONS were dangerous; the last one was harmful.
ReplyDeleteHaven't read the comments yet but I imagine there will be a slew of "Too easy," "Not up to Sunday NYT standards", etc. But I thought it was light, fun & I enjoyed it a lot. Unbelievably the only thing that tripped me up was the usual TMC/TCM thing but it was an enjoyable, light puzzle on this dreary, blizzard-boding (?) Sunday.
ReplyDeleteThank you Jill & Michelle :)
Yep, extremely easy. Whooshy would be an understatement. In contrast, I just finished a September 1994 puzzle that took me 5 times as long to finish and I had to cheat. Alas, times have changed.
ReplyDeleteCute theme, liked it a bit more than @Rex did.
I thought it was quite easy. Had Ash can before Ashbin, got a little stuck in the north west corner, but after I broke through, it flowed pretty smoothly. The one problem I had, though was the few times I had to pause it, I came back and some of my answers were erased. That being said, my time was probably several minutes less than 29 minutes. That’s pretty good for me.
ReplyDeleteI had barrel, the careen, but still couldn't make it work. Was so close to looking it up. Finally figured out it had to be career. Never heard that as a verb.
ReplyDeleteErte, Donne, One No and Mel Ott and Janis Ian I had never heard of. "Ash bin" and "my eye" I have maybe heard of but we're either before my time or not ones we used. So, yes, much was easy for me, there were some spots that I got hung up on and this was a drag for me. But the biggest drag was career.
Agree with most of what is said, cute but a little too easy. I know that words indeed change with the times. But career is a very legitimate answer. Not to play the pendant, but here are the origins of career and careen, from etymology online:
ReplyDeleteCareen:
1590s, "turn a ship on its side" (with the keel exposed, for inspection, repairs, etc.), from French cariner, literally "expose a ship's keel," from French carene "keel" (16c.), from Italian (Genoese dialect) carena, from Latin carina "keel of a ship," also (and perhaps originally) "nutshell," possibly from PIE root *kar- "hard."
Career:
1530s, "a running (usually at full speed), a course" (especially of the sun, etc., across the sky), from French carriere "road, racecourse" (16c.), from Old Provençal or Italian carriera, from Vulgar Latin *(via) cararia "carriage (road), track for wheeled vehicles," from Latin carrus "chariot" (see car). The sense of "general course of action or movement" is from 1590s, hence "course of one's public or professional life" (1803).
Personal best Sunday--not surprised.
ReplyDeleteOne of the easiest Sundays ever. The theme is readily apparent from getting any one themer, making the rest of them trivial with just a few crosses.
ReplyDeleteI had hat check which I thought would have been funny - all the hats hanging out together at hat check up to no good while their owners were off dancing the tango and smoking stogies and drinking martinis
ReplyDeleteI second OFL on Nirvanna the Band the Show the Movie. It’s silly, but for this Gen Xer it was some of the most brilliant silliness I’ve seen this side of Monty Python. Haven’t laughed this hard since Best in Show. Plus: very Canadian.
ReplyDelete109 Across; career? Careen in my world . What’s up with that? Messed up hattrees for me.
ReplyDeleteI was hoping to learn that here, also.
DeleteFun and fast. After A TALE OF TWO CITIES clued me in to the theme, I enjoyed trying to guess the others with as few crosses as possible. THE PRINCE OF TIDES was particularly clever, i thought. In the "there's no accounting for taste" department, I'm a fan of the word CAREER as clued, but feel it's often unjustly shoved out of the way for "careen." So today's answer got a fist pump from me.
ReplyDelete@Gary J-No "ly" but around here we would call this one "wicked easy". I could see TALEOFTWO something coming and was hoping for a horrible pun like TALEOFTWOSINNIES or something but it was as straightforward as could be, and the rest followed suit. Slight hiccup at spelling LIASISONS but that was about it. Had to change ASHCAN and HATRACK, and needed crosses for Mr. ERDOS, no other problems Like @Lewis I had fun trying to guess the titles
ReplyDeletewith as few letters as possible.
My heart leapt up when I beheld OPAH. Where have you been? So nice to see you.
Nice breezy Sundecito, JR and MS. Just Right for My Sunday recovery from Olympic drama, and thanks for all the fun.
As for Olympic drama, what a terrific hockey game. After the second and third periods, I was wondering how the US team was still in it, and then the three-on-three, when anything can happen and did. I know Canada didn't have Sid The Kid, but they didn't have Hellebuyck either. Great game, and congratulations to both teams.
Well said, @pablo. It so often comes down to goaltending and Hellebuyck was stellar. Congrats USA. Looking forward to the next one.
DeleteYes fairly easy (23 minutes) but I like that on Sunday. A challenging Sunday takes me like 40+ minutes which is just a real slog.
ReplyDeleteA **lot** of short names: BORAT ACELA NBA NED MAB ERDOS IAN OTT MOET ARLO WIIG MLK ILSA EDIE ONO TCM REGAL ERTE ALI DONNE! (Fortunately most are Knowns.) And a few longer ones: ED MCMAHON, ELSINORE. The themers get a pass, of course.
At 6 across "Setting for a landscape", looking at -AN-AS I thought: well, KANSAS? Why not? And at 13 down "Unity", COHERENT seemed right except it was an adjective and COHERENCE didn't fit.
At 14 down, I saw the clue "In a fury" and thought: please please don't be IRED... dammit!
Pretty well what Rex said. I dropped the themers in without much thought, even though I haven’t read all the books. In fact, I have only read WHERE THE WILD THINGS ARE. I have kids. Well they’re grown-ups now but that was required reading when they were young. Started but never completed A TALE OF TWO CITIES. It’s not that I didn’t like it; it’s just that I was tired of Dickens. I grew up in a household that might be described as a literary desert. There weren’t a lot of bookshelves and what shelf space existed was taken up by tchotchkes and knick knacks. But we had one bookshelf, near the front door so you couldn’t miss it, proudly displaying The Complete Works of Charles Dickens. Bound in burgundy and lettered in gold, proclaiming, “Ain’t we grand!”
ReplyDeleteWhen the happy family experiment crashed and burned I felt compelled to rescue these neglected, i.e. unread, volumes and over the next twenty years I made my way through about half of them. I remember liking Bleak House the best. Then, during one of our house moves, they got packed in a plain brown shipping box and never unpacked. I sold them in a garage sale about five years ago to someone who claimed to be a big fan but will probably just use them as background for an Insta pic in order to appear erudite
This puzzle was so easy, all I really have to say is “Thanks for the typing practise.”
Oh, I just remembered that there were some nice bits, New Yorkie PUP being the best.
Liked this puzzle a lot. Loved the theme answers. Did not object to Liaisons being plural. The only one that fell a bit flat for me was "The Great Escape" because I remembered Jonah being swallowed by a whale but not that he got out.
ReplyDeleteI did have Barack first, but have certainly heard them call hat trees so the change was easy.
Might have fallen into the careen trap, but already had the final r in place.
Good puzzle.
As mentioned, careen not career. And isn’t it INRE not INRI?
ReplyDelete@ Egs. I loved your riff on ONO.
ReplyDelete(Had I been on time for the meeting my vote would have been yes.).
Am i the only one who commented that all of those books have been made into movies? I thought that was the theme?
ReplyDeleteGuess I'm the only solver who sees WIIG/PLIE as a NATICK. I settled on a correct guess here, but haven't a clue how WIIG would even be pronounced. Liked the puzzle more than Rex... cute theme.
ReplyDeleteWhee-guh (but one syllable, not two)
DeleteRoo
I think this was the fastest Sunday that I can remember. Only exalt for EXTOL and HATTREES slowed me down. Had careen for CAREER and took a few seconds to figure out what was wrong. That was the last letter.
ReplyDeleteIn the musical Follies there is a song "I'm Still Here" that has the lyric "I careered from career to career, but I'm still here".
ReplyDeleteoldactor
DeleteThanks for reminding me of that Follies song. I really like it. If Rex had linked it , it might have reduced the erroneous criticism of CAREER
Constantinople wasn’t renamed because people liked it that was. It was renamed because the Ottoman Empire committed one of their many genocides of the Greek people to which all of what was once called Asia Minor belonged. Greece does not recognize any name other than Constantinople and it is still the seat of the Greek Orthodox Church.
ReplyDeleteSolved the puzzle during a hockey intermission, so I didn't mind the easiness of it. Amusing themers, enjoyed it.
ReplyDeleteHats off to Canada, clearly the better team, even without Crosby. Hellebuyck had a helle-vuh game. Incredible saves. GG!
MLS started yesterday, great match between LAFC vs. Miami. The Son Heung-min (Korea's most famous athlete) & Denis Bouanga duo is highly entertaining to watch. FIFA World Cup in June... sigh. Terrible timing to have the US host. Whelp. Back to the real world. Thank you to Ms. Rafaloff & Ms. Sontarp for a pleasant distraction.
yep. An easy-ish SunPuz solvequest of Biblical proportions.
ReplyDeletefave Biblical viceversa puzthemer: the Noah's Ark one.
staff weeject pick: PUP. This little guy contained the only U in the entire SunPuz! Or should I say SunPz? Brutal, for the M&A.
some fave stuff: ELSINORE. EDMCMAHON. HATTREES clue. MIMIC clue [the only ?-marker one in the entire SunPz ... the U's know how the ?'s feel].
Thanx for gangin up on us, Ms. Rafaloff & Sontarp darlins. And thanx for puttin in all the work, to build a clean 21x21-er.
Masked & Anonymo1U [s]
Record Sunday time for me today. Way, way too easy.
ReplyDeleteUnder 10 minutes for me. easy, but I enjoyed it. The Prince of Tides is my favorite book
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed this and finished it in one sitting. I agree it was easy but thought it was fun nevertheless. My one beef about the puzzles recently is the repetition of clues and answers not only in Sunday but weekly. The one that comes to mind right now is the Casablanca clue for Ingrid Bergman’s role. I am sure it was in another puzzle last week. I also agree with Rex about the puzzles overall becoming easier. Even my daughter who just does the Sunday asked me if I had noticed this.
ReplyDeleteRex saw the movie, the Great Escape but was only vaguely aware of the book. . I understand Rex’s comments though because the book was written in 1950 by an Australian. Being a non fiction no Americans were involved in that book just British and Commonwealth prisoners. (Americans were all in separate camps at least by the time of the actual escape). My guess is American readers were probably much less interested in the book for that reason. . Since American financing was involved an American star had to be involved in the movie. The movie is mostly a work of fiction.from what I have heard. The actual escape ended in a horrible tragedy. Almost all the escapees were recaptured. Of the 75 recaptured, 50 were murdered by the SS on Hitler’s direct order ( the SS literally took each one separately for “a ride” and shot each one on the side of the road, claiming they all had tried to escape). Knowingly that, I never could bring myself to see the movie however “good “ it is.
ReplyDeleteIn my opinion, there was a book. So it met the criteria of the theme.
This puzzle was unusually easy for me too. But I liked it anyway. The theme was well executed. I can understand why Rex and others don’t like it because they do puzzles very fast and this one was over way too soon. Me I am very slow so it kept me busy for a while.
This was a very quick but not unpleasant solve. Obvious theme, no clunky puns (don’t get me wrong,I love a clever language-based pun) and I loved seeing WHERE THE WILD THINGS ARE. I couldn’t believe it was a debut, but I’ve been solving for a ling time and read that book aloud so many times I had it memorized and was sure I would have remembered. Sure enough, it’s a debut.
ReplyDeleteIn a total non sequitur, I absolutely loved seeing @Rex feature the Paul Erdös bobblehead. If only I had known it existed before my husband’s death. Both our daughter and I got him “Math King” gifts each year and instead of giving them on his birthday, we picked the birthday of a mathematician every year. He rescued us multiple times from events that absent his genius and teaching ability would have resulted in Lifelong Math Trauma. I may have to acquire one as a talisman.
For me, the theme was obvious and easy. And I’m not complaining. Let’s face it, Sunday grids are a massive challenge. And So many Sunday theme types have been done Nd sone and done and done. And I’m happy to do repeat themes if the answers are clever a d the grid is full of decent answers. Today pretty much passed that test. So, on to Monday.
theme was solid super easy - is a.i. gonna be making puzzles and we don't realize it that's SCARY! I think Yoko 'Ono' is out Jedi knighting all other fill including Star Wars references have a blessed Sunday
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