Crossword 169: Triple Play

 
William Etty, The Three Graces

William Etty, The Three Graces

 

Today’s crossword sets records for this site, in number of entries (80), number of 3-letter entries (39), and number of black squares (54) for a 15 x 15 puzzle.  Maybe you’ll agree that the dazzlingly unusual theme is worth it all.  Maybe you won’t.  In either case, it’s too late to do anything about it now.


Download this week’s crossword:

169-Triple-Play.puz

169-Triple-Play.pdf

Solve this week’s crossword online:

169 Triple Play


Pointing Hand.png

Two crosswords of mine will appear Thursday, February 18, one in the Los Angeles Times, the other in Universal Crossword


Crossword 168: MP5

 
Margaret Sarah Carpenter, Mrs John Marshall, MP

Margaret Sarah Carpenter, Mrs John Marshall, MP

 

You’ve heard of MP3, a format for compressing recorded music files to a convenient size, and MP4, a format for compressing movies to a convenient size.  Now here’s MP5! It isn’t a format, and it doesn’t compress anything to a convenient size. It’s just a crossword puzzle. Nevertheless, in its quiet, unassuming way, it makes its own tiny contribution to the sum of human achievement.


Download this week’s crossword:

168-MP5.puz

168-MP5.pdf

Solve this week’s crossword online:

168-MP5

Crossword 167: Power Plugs

 
Lord Frederic Leighton, The Arts of Industry as Applied to Peace

Lord Frederic Leighton, The Arts of Industry as Applied to Peace

 

In this puzzle I interrogate our society’s underlying structures of power, as part of my ongoing critique of post-modern, late-capitalist cultural hegemony.


Download this week’s crossword:

167-Power-Plugs.puz

167-Power-Plugs.pdf

Solve this week’s crossword online:

167 Power Plugs


Pointing Hand in Reverse.png

A crossword of mine appeared last Thursday, January 28th, in the Wall Street Journal.


Crossword 163: P-p-puns

 
George Dunlop Leslie, Sweet Peas

George Dunlop Leslie, Sweet Peas

 

Now and then, in the major crossword venues, one finds a puzzle in which the theme answers consist of common two-word phrases that start with the same one or two letters.  POISONPILL PINGPONG PARCELPOST POLOPONY—voilà.  That theme took me just sixty seconds to produce.  No doubt a competent programmer with access to a phrase database could make a computer produce sixty such puzzles in sixty seconds.  And they would be just as much fun to solve as they were to make.

Why is such a theme acceptable?  Does anyone know?  I don’t get it.  Anyway, today’s puzzle represents my effort to improve on it.


Download this week’s crossword:

163-P-P-Puns.puz

163-P-P-Puns.pdf

Solve this week’s crossword online:

163 P-P-Puns

Crossword 160: OLÉ

 
Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema, An Oleander

Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema, An Oleander

 

Have no fear:  this puzzle has nothing to do with bullfighting, or soccer, or anything that requires you to watch people kill animals or run around on a rectangular surface.  I put an accent over the "e" just for the look of the thing. 


Download this week’s crossword:

160-Olé.puz

160-Olé.pdf

Solve this week’s crossword online:

160 Olé


Pointing Hand.png

A crossword of mine appears tomorrow, December 13, in Universal Crossword


Crossword 157: Not Going Anywhere

 
John Atkinson Grimshaw, Moonlight on the Lake, Roundhay Park, Leeds

John Atkinson Grimshaw, Moonlight on the Lake, Roundhay Park, Leeds

 

With this puzzle I embark on my fourth year of providing the world with a weekly crossword and a weekly Victorian novel recommendation.  And I’m not going anywhere.  I’m here for the duration (don’t ask me of what), grimly determined to see it through (whatever it might be).  Nothing can shake my resolve!

Well, we’ll see how I feel tomorrow.


Download this week’s crossword:

157-Not-Going-Anywhere.puz

157-Not-Going-Anywhere.pdf

Solve this week’s crossword online:

157 Not Going Anywhere


Pointing Hand.png

A crossword of mine appears on Thursday, November 26, in Universal Crossword


Crossword 156: Yet Another Cavalcade of Crosswordese

 
Thomas Francis Dicksee, Ophelia

Thomas Francis Dicksee, Ophelia

 

I conclude this website’s third year with a third cavalcade of crosswordese—a puzzle that combines the tiredest crossword fill I can find into the groanworthiest answer phrases I can imagine.  Its purpose is to arouse in the solver the emotions of morphological pity and alphabetic fear, thereby inducing a catharsis of those emotions (see Aristotle’s Poetics).  

Once cleansed, you’ll find yourself in a mood to donate to the site; so I’ve made that easy for you with the button below.  Donate $10 and you’ll get a crossword filled only with words and phrases current in the Victorian era (and still current today, of course).  Donate $13.50 and you’ll get a 21 x 21 crossword.  Donate $15 and you’ll get both.  Donate $10,000,000 and the site will be renamed in your honor.

DONATION UPDATE:

I can also receive donations through PayPal and Venmo, at my email address.


Donate

Crossword 154: Nicknames

 
John Atkinson Grimshaw, A Moonlit Lane

John Atkinson Grimshaw, A Moonlit Lane

 

Today’s puzzle has a sequel, involving a further twist, which I’ll make available next week as a bonus.  Meanwhile, here’s another painting by the great Atkinson Grimshaw, this one suitable for Halloweens with full moons.


Download this week’s puzzle:

154-Nicknames.puz

154-Nicknames.pdf

Solve this week’s puzzle online:

154 Nicknames


Pointing Hand.png

A crossword of mine appears today, and another on Thursday, November 5, in Universal Crossword


Crossword 150: Richly Arrayed

 
William Etty, Preparing for a Fancy Dress Ball

William Etty, Preparing for a Fancy Dress Ball

 

Some people seem to think that, just because they never leave the house anymore, they need take no trouble about their dress—that they can sit around all day in sweatpants and t-shirts, or other sartorial atrocities named for bodily fluids or letters of the alphabet, and suffer no debilitating moral effects in consequence.

Not I! When I made this puzzle, I wore a three-piece Oxford-gray vicuna-wool suit trimmed in gold thread, a hand-stitched mulberry-silk shirt of deepest burgundy, a powder-blue diamond-plated necktie, and Belgian linen underwear lined with mink.  I trust that when you solve it you also will array yourself no less richly.


Download this week’s crossword:

150-Richly Arrayed.puz

150-Richly Arrayed.pdf

Solve this week’s crossword online:

150: Richly Arrayed