Thursday, May 28, 2026

Thursday, May 28, 2026, John Kugelman

This was a fun one. How to describe it? Take a word that ends in "or," break it into two words, the last being "or," find a phrase that contains those two words, then clue it so the original word works with the last part of the phrase and the "or" is absorbed again. Something like that. It'll be easier if I just use examples.

Walking-around money for Pavarotti? - TENORTWENTY
Preacher's gift? - PASTORPRESENT
5 and 8 go into 42, for example? - FACTORFICTION
Local leader is prohibited? - MAYORMAYNOT

Impressive and amusing. I laughed out loud at the absurdity of the third one. 

SLOEEYED

Speaking of amusing, I also laughed out loud at 11D - "Answer to 'Why's your report card in the trash?'" (OHNOREASON). Hah! 

Interesting trivia about the ASTROS (Baseball team formerly known as the Colt .45s), and I didn't know that the PINACOLADA was the "National drink of Puerto Rico," or that Dr. Pepper was invented in WACO.

I'm sure Ken Jennings will get a laugh out of 16A "Long-handled gardening tool or immoral pleasure seeker, per contestant Ken Jennings on 'Jeopardy!' (incorrectly)" (HOE). That's quite the pointed clue! :) 

OVERARM (Throwing style) seemed a tad unusual - isn't "overhand" more common? - TERTIARY (Third in order) was odd, and SENSATE (Perceptive) seemed forced, but really, there's not much junk at all.

Best clue: Blue stop sign? (SAFEWORD), but the non-QMC "Bit of a lark" (WING) was also very good.

Overall, I quite enjoyed it.

- Horace 

  

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Wednesday, May 27, 2026, Dario Salvucci

File this under "They have to keep coming up with things." Today we have three entries that each make up a PARTOF[a]SPEECH. The first, FOURSCOREAND, is, as you know, the start of Lincoln's Gettysburg Address. The second, ASKNOTWHAT, is drawn from the last portion of Kennedy's inaugural address. And the third, HAVEADREAM, is a part of a part of Martin Luther King, Jr.'s speech given, at the Lincoln Memorial, during the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. 

ELM

Rereading these three speeches today is a sad endeavor. Even in their hopefulness, they cannot help but highlight the problems that have plagued this country from the beginning. The world is not so very different now. Though on paper this nation may have been conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all are created equal, freedom does not ring from the mighty mountains of New York, nor every hill and molehill of Mississippi. If only we really had been unwilling to witness or permit the slow undoing of those human rights to which this nation has always been committed... If America is to be a great nation, this must become true.

The world will little note, nor long remember what I say about this puzzle, but here goes anyway. 

Misstep: GOTAlight before GOTAMATCH (Question from one smoker to another).     
New to me: ROBOTSUMO (Engineering competition with two "battling" devices).
Favorite clue: Superman is one, notably (ALIEN). We think like to think of him as one of our own, a good citizen, but he cares about justice and truth and fairness, so really, how could he be an American.

Sigh. 

Kennedy did not believe that any of us would exchange places with any other people or any other generation, but sometimes I wonder.

- Horace 

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Tuesday, May 26, 2026, Brad Lively

The revealer today is BODYOFKNOWLEDGE (What the answers to the starred clues are, collectively?), and it refers to the following entries:

SHARPTEETH - *Aids for biting
KEENEYE - *Attribute for spotting what others miss
WISEASS - *Cheeky sort
SMARTMOUTH - *One given to insolence 

The thinking is that the first parts of all the theme answers - sharp, keen, wise, smart - are synonyms for knowledge, and the second parts are all parts of the body. OK. And three of the phrases are in fairly common usage. SHARPTEETH is just kind of a random thing, and the last two - WISEASS and SMARTMOUTH - are synonyms themselves, and these things muddy the waters a bit for me, but still, it works on one level, and it's Tuesday, so let's move on.

ADELE at a GALA (Does the Grammys count?)

When I do an early week puzzle, I will often try to get the first three Across answers and then move immediately to the Downs that run off of them. This worked well today until I got to 5D - "Spot to keep a passport while traveling." I had the H, and so I entered Hippocket without a second thought. It took several crosses to get me to realize that they actually wanted HOTELSAFE, which is pretty much the polar opposite of my original answer. For the record, I have never put my passport in a hotel safe. I leave for more passport travel in a little over a week, and I will update you if I end up doing so.

Best clues today: "A little sun?" (DWARFSTAR) and "Number not representable by Roman numerals" (ZERO). 

Overall, I liked it.

- Horace 

Monday, May 25, 2026

Monday, May 25, 2026, Anthony Grubb

The week is starting off HOTHOTHOT! Which is nice, because the weekend has been pretty cool and rainy up here in "other New England," as it's referred to at the A.C.P.T. Harrumph!

Today's tidy theme, courtesy of Buster Poindexter, is three things that are hot - DEATHVALLEYGHOSTPEPPER, and a good old R-rated LOVESCENE. Nice. Is it relevant that SALIVA is just under the GHOSTPEPPER? Or that the LOVESCENE connects with DARKNESS? Hmm... HOTHOTHOT sits ATOP OBOE and HIVE... mayyybe HIVE could work.

Lois LANE

OK, enough on that. Let's turn now to a few of the QMCs - "Paper cut?" for EDIT was good, "De-tension center?" was cute for SPA, "Go off the deep end" (DIVE) worked in a similar vein, and "Place of buzziness" was just plain kwazy for HIVE. In non-QMCs, I was amused by the oddness of "Back of a car or front of an elephant" (TRUNK). 

I was a little surprised to see HOBO (Drifter in search of work) in the grid. (Do we still use that term?) It reminded me of when I was a college student, making my way from campus to the small town of Beloit, Wisconsin. As I passed a young boy walking with his mother, he turned to her and said, excitedly, "Look, Mom, a HOBO!" True story.

I enjoyed this one.  

- Horace 

Sunday, May 24, 2026

Sunday, May 24, 2026, David Steinberg

NEXT, PLEASE!

It's Sunday, and we have a puzzle with the theme of advancing one letter in a phrase one step, alphabetically. The affected letter is circled, but the change only happens in the Across answers. The original phrases vary from good - "controlled chaos" and "give me one reason" - to mundane - "contact lens" and "first class mail," and the converted phrases and wacky cluing vary similarly. The best are, maybe, FIRSTCLASSNAIL (Good name for a salon specializing in mani-pedis?) and GIVEMEONESEASON (Exasperated television producer's plea?). 

OREGON flag

There were some bright spots in the fill - FORE (Warning after a slice), CAST (Musical group?), and LIPREADERS (Experts in body language?). And ONTHEAPPS (Using Tinder, Bumble, Hinge, etc.) was nice. But I took issue with the awkwardly clued AGO (Earlier), the rando DISK (coin, commonly), and "Stance that resembles a ballerina on one leg" (DANCERPOSE). I mean, isn't a ballerina standing on one leg a person in a DANCERPOSE? And yes, I know it's yoga.

Oh, I don't know. I got up on the wrong side of the bed, maybe, and this puzzle didn't do it for me. The theme answers all work fine, and the changed letters spell out "plus one," which is a nice touch, but somehow it just didn't sing to me. I won't say IHATEDIT, but I did say EWE a few times. At least it GOTDONE, and now I'm GUANACO on to tomorrow. See you then.
 
- Horace 

Friday, May 22, 2026

Saturday, May 23 2026, Kameron Austin Collins

Love the  layout today!!  A chunky solve, especially in the middle of the grid, where a full dozen long-ish clues intersect.  Very impressive construction - though the price paid is the almost-orphaning of the top left and lower right corners.

Right off the bat in that top corner, there's misdirection afoot with "They might be settled atop stools" - BARBETS, after a moment's thought. Just below that, "A boxer's might knock you out" did not fool old ex-boxer-owner me - DOGBREATH.    Those answers helped with a Down entry  RIGVEDA ("Ancient collection of Hindu hymns") that was a learning for me.

Other learnings - German novelist Theodor FONTANE ... MARLSTONE as an ingredient in cement ... the SANDSNAKE which preys on lizards in Africa ... Edward GOREY's "The Gashleycrumb Tinies" - what a fabulous book title!!



38A "Sugar ____" was a write-in for me, who grew up in the Eastern Townships, home of the world's best MAPLE syrup.   Raised my eyebrows at MATEINONE as a "Chess puzzle challenge, maybe".  Stress the "maybe" - it's hard to make a one-move chess puzzle that is much of a challenge!  "Walk on water?" (GANGPLANK) was amusing :)

Finally, how many of you wrote in TIC instead of SEA for "Tac preceder"?  (I did!)

This was a really great Saturday puzzle on which to end a week of blogging.  Horace takes the reins tomorrow.  Enjoy your weekend everybody!

-philbo


Thursday, May 21, 2026

Friday, May 22 2026, Gene Louise de Vera

A pleasant, not too difficult themeless Friday puzzle that just seemed to flow from top to bottom, with a somewhat unusual 16x15 grid bisected vertically by a pair of long entries side by side.  (What do we call "stacks" when they're vertical?)  One of these really piqued my interest : Beethoven's MOONLIGHTSONATA, clued at 7D as "an inspiration for Chopin's Fantaisie-Impromptu".  I'd not heard that before, so as I write this, I am listening to the Chopin piece with that in mind.  It's lovely, but do I hear echoes of the Moonlight Sonata in there?  I dunno.  Maybe I need a better musical ear.

I particularly liked a couple of the other long entries as well.  18A "Qualifier to an embarrassing question" (ASKINGFORAFRIEND) made me smile; I use that phrase all the time.  And the other long Down entry 8D "Kepler-22b or Kepler-186f, e.g." (EARTHLIKEPLANET) tickles my science-y fancy.  Amazing that we can make that determination from impossibly far away!

Other nuggets in the grid .. 15A "Footnote phrase" is ETALII, which one rarely sees in its unabbreviated form.  I was a little Shocked at the 65A QMC "What some streakers are charged with?" (TASER) - I definitely did not expect that!  A bit of unusual construction in the lower left corner, with CLOT and CLOY side by side.  Neat!  I also had to do a double-take before accepting MEANS as the answer to "Is" at 26D.  

Finally, a shoutout to William of OCCAM, he of the eponymous Razor.  In the spirit of simplicity, I shall end here.

Cheerio!

-philbo