Tuesday, May 12, 2026
Tuesday, May 12, John Ruff
Monday, May 11, 2026
Monday, May 11, 2026, Joel Woodford
Well, hello everybody! How exciting to be back. I certainly didn't expect to be writing these blog posts any more, but after the ACPT, and the pleasure of reconnecting with the community of NYT crossword puzzle enthusiasts, it was hard to resist. With a quick glance back, I see my last post was nearly two years ago exactly, on Friday May 24, 2024.
And now I have returned to review a Monday pangram. I wondered when I hit the middle western section with that Q and Z, and then the J in the lower western corner. It's rare to make a puzzle with every letter of the alphabet represented that is as smooth as this one is. Congratulations, Mr. Woodford!
The theme is a cute reimagination of OHDEAR (45D: "Goodness me!" ... or a phonetic hint to 17-, 31-, 39-, and 55-Across). In each of these four long answers is hidden the letter O and then a synonym for that four-legged woodland creature. Handy-dandy circles tell the discerning solver where they are.
How useful it is to have memorized all the countries of the world
BILLBOARDCHARTS is the least cromulent of the four, only because of the necessary -S at the end. Otherwise, I do love an HORSDOEUVRE, and DROPINTHEBUCKET is very good.
In the fun clue section of the review, I have to recognize 30A: Take fowl foully (POACH). I also liked the duet of 4A: Animal that ranges around Peru (LLAMA) and 8D: Peruvian mountains (ANDES). The fact they intersect makes it more delicious. We also get MER and EAU in another pairing.
Thanks to all who have come back to read our posts again. It's nice to see the readership bounce back. Happy solving all!
- Colum
Sunday, May 10, 2026
Sunday, May 10, 2026, Rachel Fabi and Adam Wagner
COME FULL CIRCLE
A Sunday with a trick! The title and the grid art both hint at the solution, which is to complete the circle - turn those Cs in the italicized answers into Os, and then things start to make sense. For example:
32A Wild cats becomes "wild oats," and is answered by YOUTHFULINDISCRETIONS. Likewise 39D Bic filler is not "ink" or anything like that, because the clue is really "bio filler," which is LIFESTORY. Tricky, but you are clued in that something is going on by the italics, and once it becomes clear what that something is, things get easier.
That said, I still had some difficulty in the middle, where that central, black square C also needs to become an O, and that is done by way of three rebus squares into which the word "block" is entered. So the answer at 64-Across, which is clued with "Large summer delivery, in past times / N.F.L. linemen, at times" turns out to be ICE[BLOCK]ERS, the two answers being both completed and separated by the creation of a black square. Interesting, and kinda cool. And I love how 65-Down is just clued literally, with what needs to go there. Hah!
Even with all the trickiness, my last square was the A in SICARIO and RAMOS. I knew neither the Emily Blunt thriller nor the Philippine president, but while a U seemed plausible in the thriller name, it seemed less so in the human name.
I don't know that I've ever heard ADNOUN for an adjective used as a noun, and I didn't remember that East Asian fiddles were ERHUS. And what do we think of the clue "Get ad-libby-dibby while singy-ingy-inging?" (SCAT)? Is it just the ZANIEST clue you've ever seen, or is it CORNIER? Honestly, I think it is corny, and I think "Less freshly funny" isn't the right clue for that word. But what do I know, I'm not the funny one at this blog. :P
OK, I think Colum will start up tomorrow, but I'm really not quite sure. We haven't really gotten this thing ironed out again yet.
Thanks for reading!
- Horace
Saturday, May 9, 2026
Saturday, May 9, 2026, Katie Hoody
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| https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Pomegranate_fruit_-_whole_and_piece_with_arils.jpg |
Friday, May 8, 2026
Friday, May 8, 2026, Rafael Musa and Geoffrey Schorkopf
Thursday, May 7, 2026
Thursday, May 7, 2026, John Guzzetta and Jeff Chen
Today's solvers are meant to figure out what's missing from the four block-letter-and-blanks clues that make up the theme, which are all, in some way, less than they should be. :) Looking at 27A: ___TER, for example, the answer tells us that it is a WINLESSSEASON, meaning that if we add the letters WIN in place of the blanks in the clue, we get WINTER, which is a winless season in more ways than one! Kidding! Who doesn't love winter? Even though the theme is less, it's all win-win because the answers are both apt and common phrases. I especially liked how a CARELESSMISTAKE could be a BAD CAREER MOVE. We've all been there.
Fortunately, the careless mistakes I made in the puzzle today were easily rectified. I first entered 'urn' for "Coffee container." Even as I did so, I thought, "there are other possibilities ...," and as soon as I read the clue at 7D "Country that boycotted the 1984 Olympics" (USSR), I downsized from 'urn' to MUG. The clue 26A: "Locale in the Christmas story" (INN) helped me correct my initial misspelling of Gary SINISE's name. I also went a little off piste with 54A" "___ bien" filling in 'très' before, frankly, seeing how it made the crosses incomprehensible. A change to Spanish and ESTA bien.
I enjoyed the C/APs "Does to perfection" (NAILS) and "Strike down" (LAYLOW). "Saucer contents, informally" for ETS is fun. I also very much enjoyed the Jeannette Rankin quote "You can no more win a WAR than you can win an earthquake." Talk about apt!
Call me out of touch, but I could have done without "Pedicure target" (TOE). I also don't really think of SLEDS as toys, so that slowed me down a bit. That being said, the puzzle's great cluing and fun fill like SNORKEL, SPRIG, SPEW, KNIT, SKUA, MUSCLECARS, and SORRYSIGHT serve as lessons in puzzle quality construction.
In keeping with the theme, it's a short review today: less is more! :)
~Frannie.
Wednesday, May 6, 2026
Wednesday, May 6, 2026, James Mattina
Today's puzzle offers solvers a whole bunch of flowers as theme answers. In each quadrant, two flowers are CROSSPOLINATED at the Across/Down intersection where their shared letter is circled. For example, in the northeast we have ASTER and PEONY. The clues for the flowers convey interesting facts about each blossom. As a long-time crossword puzzle solver, "lei" is well-known to me, but, having never been to Hawaii, I did not know that lei's are made from HIBISCUS. We learn that the AZALEA is a "bloom whose toxic nectar is one source of 'mad honey.'" Coincidentally, I recently read a book ("The Towers of Trebizond" by Rose Macaulay) which featured a camel being driven crazy by "mad honey" from time to time as the main character rode it through mid-20th century Turkey. The theme C/AP that made me most gladiolus was "Flower found along a metaphorical path of ease" (PRIMROSE).
Overall, I thought the puzzle featured some colorful clues. I enjoyed "Don't believe it" (LIE), "Narrow margin of victory" (HAIR), "Charging option" (VISA), "First sign of fall" (LIBRA), "Bed cover" (MULCH), and "Alice, in Wonderland" (VISITOR) - so much depends upon a comma.
In the category we here at HAFDTNYTCPFCAWCCFP like to call QMCs, or Question Mark Clues but which, in this context, I'll call posies (heh), I very much enjoyed "Winter coat?" / ICE, "Airdrops?" / MIST - always a bonus when a plural clue results in an answer without an "S" at the end - and the theme C/AP "Flower found at the end of a rainbow?" / VIOLET - an arc de triomphe. :)
Fill-wise, I liked INTRIGUE, HOLYTOLEDO, and MULCH. The only thorn that arose was the surprising-to-me MEAT for "Nitty-gritty," which I found kind of a weird anther.
I'm guessing that loyal reader and commenter Huygens enjoyed the two math clues "All primes except 2" (ODDNUMBERS) and "Siete + uno" (OCHO) in the midwest. And possibly also "Pattern based on nature" (CAMO). :)
Myosotis and come back tomorrow for more dandy crossword commentary. :)
~Frannie.



