Sunday, July 5, 2026

Sunday , July 5, 2026, Rich Katz

BOXED SETS

Hey, folks. I'm back for another week of blogging. Kudos to Horace for writing two weeks while on a challenging slog through Italy! I'm sure we all have a lot of sympathy for his plight.

I've been really enjoying solving the puzzle lately. I've decided to take pressure off of myself and not worry about solve times, and simply enjoy the process. It's a very different approach from, for example, solving at the ACPT. Mondays and Tuesdays still go by very quickly, often too quickly to appreciate the theme during the solve, but still, being in the moment is worth it!

Today's puzzle has a really fun theme. Each theme answer is presented using the mathematical symbols for a set, and has three items in it. The relationship of these items to each other can be interpreted using a common phrase. For example, 23A: {Elijah, Ruth, Natalie} is BABEINTHEWOODS, referring to Babe Ruth between Elijah and Natalie Woods. 

They're all really well done, not a LAME one in the BEVY of answers. I particularly liked HONORAMONGTHIEVES (with Oscar referring to the Academy Awards), and POWERBEHINDTHETHRONE (AC/DC after the water closet - Hah!). 


Perhaps my favorite clue today was 32D: Flatter feet? (ODE). How to make this bit of crosswordese fresh again? With an outrageous pun, that's how. It will always win me over.

I also enjoyed 89D: You won't actually die of it (BOREDOM). 

Otherwise this was an enjoyable Sunday grid, and a lovely time spent with the puzzle. See you tomorrow!

- Colum

Saturday, July 4, 2026

Saturday, July 4, 2026, Kareem Ayas

I don't usually talk about solve times, but this week The Turn went in reverse order for me: Thursday took longer than Friday, which took longer than today's. And the odd thing is that this one felt the hardest at the beginning, but then things started to fall into place.

LEGGS

In the NW, I did not know the word OCEANARIA (Expansive marine exhibits), but I guessed that it would start with "ocean," so that helped. And although I thought "Grand Tour, e.g." was a bit of a stretch as a clue, after a few downs it sure looked like it would be BIKERACE. I would prefer to have seen the name of an actual race, rather than an umbrella term, but hey, it's Saturday.

Over in the NE, I broke in with "Peacock's home" (NBC), and CEL (Piece of cartoon memorabilia), before the long Downs started to res in. GREENBERET came to mind immediately, but I didn't realize that it was only a nickname. The real name is United States Army Special Forces. Oh, and speaking of trivia, Montpelier is smaller than PIERRE (Second-smallest U.S. state capital by population (about 14,000 people)), but Vermont is only second in the least populous state category, to Wyoming.

I liked the Wilde quote (LIFEIMITATESART), and it was interesting to learn about CREAMSODA (Soft drink originally made with egg whites). 

Colum takes over tomorrow! Until then, happy puzzling!

- Horace
 

Friday, July 3, 2026

Friday, July 3, 2026, Barbara Lin

Welp, I was wrong about the hemiquincentennial and themed puzzles. Aside from PRESIDENTIALRUN (Race to the top), there's nothing particularly patriotic about this one. And I suppose I shouldn't be surprised, because, duh, Friday and Saturday are themeless. Ever find yourself in a situation where you forget everything that you've been talking about for ten years and SPEW out some CANARD, only to realize it the next morning? Well, IKNOWTHEFEELING

The RIM of Vesuvius

So, Aside from that Mrs. Lincoln, how did you enjoy the puzzle? Well, some of clues seemed straightforward ("Accepts accolades onstage, say" (TAKESABOW), "Opposite side" (FOE)), and some are that type which can be contorted to make sense, but which are less satisfying (N.A.A.C.P. member?: Abbr. (ASSN) (the abbreviation ASSN being a "member" of the shorter abbreviation), and "Play pieces?" (SETDESIGNS) (Sure, they're part of the construction of a play, but are they often considered "pieces?"). I know, I know, it's a game and part of the game is that the constructors and the clue writers try to trick the solvers, but sometimes it works better than other times. I have gone back and forth a bit on "Makes a return that hits the net?" (EFILES), because it's a fun tennis decoy, but agreeing that "hits the net" is normal to mean "travels via the internet" is ... well, is it a SRSLY? situation or is it a YES?

On the other hand, I did enjoy "Item that's not on the list, say" (IMPULSEBUY), "Shelling" (MORTARFIRE), and "Claims not to have known" (PLEADSIGNORANCE) (although I first wanted "feigns" here), and the puzzle as a whole was satisfying. What did you think?

- Horace 

 

Thursday, July 2, 2026

Thursday, July 2, 2026, David J. Kahn

The semiquincentennial is starting early! Today we have the postal code for all thirteen original colonies in rebus form scattered throughout the grid. I caught on to the trick on the BE[NJ]AMIN (10 Hamiltons) / [PA]T[RI]OTS (American Revolution heroes) line, and really, it might have been [PA]ULA (Comedian Poundstone) that really forced my hand, as there can only be one answer to that, and it doesn't fit in four boxes. In other places, like 3-Down, I was able to answer "Ordinary" with PLAInold instead of PLAI[NJ]ANE.

OLETA

I like how Mr. Kahn was able to include so many bonus, America-related words, like [MA]DISONS[DE]LE[GA]TIONSELE[CT]U[SC]ENSUSSENATOR, and even IOWA. And for good measure, and I'm sure because I am in Italy, he also threw in PIZZA and CANNOLI. Thanks, Dave! :)

I look forward to two more 'Murica-related puzzles on Friday and Saturday, and maybe even a big, colorful one full of fireworks on Sunday, but if that happens, it'll be Colum who gets to talk about it.

See you tomorrow!

- Horace
 

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Wednesday, July 1, 2026, Jeffrey Martinovic

Wormholes do exist! Today one snakes through the middle of the grid, connecting two completely walled off segments that are mirror images of each other. And we have, essentially, two revealers at the bottom - PARALLELUNIVERSE and ALTERNATEREALITY. It's pretty cool. When I realized that all the Downs in the NW and NE were the same, I half expected a similar thing to occur elsewhere in the puzzle, but no, it's just those two sections. The rest plays like a themeless, aside from the two 16-letter grid spanners.

AGATE

"Bed for fish?" (SUSHIRICE) was very good. SALIVATE (Get ready for dinner, say) was a little much. And "Position in a bridge game" (SEAT) was odd, and tricky, as I wanted a compass point there.

Is it just me, or were there a lot of deception-related entries, like "Double-crosser" (RAT), WHITELIE (It's just a little bit off), "Dodge deceptively" (EVADE), "Trickster" (CONARTIST), and "Places where people are usually lying, for short" (ERS). Hah!

Fun Wednesday.

- Horace 

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Tuesday, June 30, 2026, John Liber

My favorite clue today as I was solving was "Warning before your breaking point?" (ADOUT). That's a clever clue. Aside from that, though, most of them are fairly straightforward. I was briefly mad about "Easily broken" for FRAIL, because I mostly think about that adjective being used for people, but I looked it up and they gave some examples like "frail boats in a storm," and "a nations's frail economy," so I had to reconsider.

REN

The theme of EMPTYWORDS, or "words that start with M and T" was fine. MACHINETOOLS was maybe the least "in the language," but it's perfectly cromulent. I have been meaning to sign up for an introductory class to learn to use the MACHINETOOLS at a maker space I joined, but I have not yet found the time.

I thought the upper middle was the weirdest, with its WIIU (Nintendo Switch predecessor), HOGCALLS ("Sooooey!" and "Here, piggy, piggy!"), and OUGHTTO (Really should). And can you look at GODARK (Suddenly cease all communication) without seeing it as "God ark?"

OK, I need to get on the road. Today's seven-hour drive from Rome to the Veneto will be a test of just how many espressos one human body can endure. 

See you tomorrow! Hopefully.

- Horace 

Monday, June 29, 2026

Monday, June 29, 2026, Ginny Too and Rajeswari Rajamani

A smile-inducing, reduplicative theme today. The only theme answer that I have heard in normal conversation is SPARRINGRING, but the others are all valid, at least in a crossword puzzle valid kind of way. 

DEVICEVICE - Screen addiction, e.g.
SPARRINGRING - Where boxers trade jabs
INTELLIGENTGENT - Clever chap
NOBELISTLIST - Nelson Mandela, Malala Yousafzai, Linus Pauling, Martin Luther King Jr. and so on
FELINELINE - "Meow, meow, meow!," e.g.

OK, FELINELINE is borderline. And speaking of, my niece's son is trying to get us to a cat cafe today. It's his last day with us in Rome, and the two items on the agenda are getting into the Pantheon, and getting to the cat cafe. And then if there's time, maybe the Appian Way. 

Doesn't it seem like a cat cafe would be a better fit in EGYPT

CACTI

ROUE (Hedonistic sort) is a bit of an outlier on a Monday, and I wasn't sure whether they'd want ISLES or islas for "Majorca and Minorca," but things worked themselves out. 

A breezy Monday. I think Frannie takes over tomorrow, and I'll see you in a few.

- Horace