When I'm not on blogging duty, I do the NYT puzzles online, which is a faster but somewhat less satisfying experience; solving with pen and paper lends itself to a better appreciation of theme, clever clues, and overall construction. Today, as I worked my way through the grid and put little tick marks beside my favourite clues, I felt like my cup runneth over - such great cluing today!!
My entry point was Soprano RENEE Fleming, right in the middle of the grid. Immediately below that, the grid-spanning "'I've done better" was obviously NOTMYFINESTHOUR, except, as it turned out, it was actually NOTMYFINESTWORK - my only misstep today.
Back up at the very top, the high-quality clues began immediately. 1A "Dad's pop, perhaps" (CREAMSODA) took me a while to "get" - I thought it was a questionable generational reference, but no, it's a branding thing. Right below that, I needed most of the crossers to figure out 15A "One might be used to launch promotional materials" (AIRCANNON - brilliant!!). And right below THAT, 17A "That's not the whole story!" (PLOTPOINT) was very clever.
I could narrate practically the entire grid like this. 7D "Bulb that becomes translucent when heated" (ONION). 23D "Stories of college students?" (DORM). 34D "Man's name whose first four letters spell a word describing its last letter" (RINGO) - also very clever! 31D "Fair weather followers" (SNOWBIRDS) - indeed - a whole contigent of Canadians can be classified this way...
The only thing approaching a "nit" for me is Hall-of-Fame football coach WEEB Ewbank at 43A. A tiny bit of a reach, no?
A fitting finale at 61D "Sound made when something snaps into place?" (AHA) - a suitable anagram for AAH, the sound I made upon completing this puzzle. Well done Ms. Hoody, well done indeed!
It's been a slice this week! And now, over to Horace's capable hands.....
-philbo


