Crossword 251: I Recycle

 

John William Godward, The Mirror

 

That’s right!  I recycle!  I separate cans, bottles, and paper.  I break down the boxes and I tear the labels off the cans.  I even tear the little plastic windows off the business envelopes and the pasta boxes.  And, like other people who use yard signs, bumper stickers, banners, tee shirts, and other such means to announce their possession of basic virtues, I thought everybody would be glad to know this about me.  You are glad, aren’t you? Of course. So here’s a crossword for you, in my honor.


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251-I-Recycle.puz

251-I-Recycle.pdf

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251 I Recycle

Crossword 249: Excess Verbiage

 

Henry Stacy Marks, The Odd Volume

 

We here at David Alfred Bywaters’s Crossword Cavalcade and Weekly Victorian Novel Recommender work tirelessly to express ourselves as clearly and concisely as possible. As a result, we are always having to haul away great piles of excess verbiage; however, we are careful to dispose of it in an environmentally responsible manner.  Much of it we donate to academic and philanthropic institutions, whose need for this commodity is insatiable.  But this week we’re experimenting with the possibility of recycling.


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249-Excess-Verbiage.puz

249-Excess-Verbiage.pdf

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249 Excess Verbiage

Crossword 246: That’s Just Preverted!

 

George Hayter, The Town Clerk of Brecon and His Family

 

Don’t let the title worry you—you can solve this puzzle, as you can all my puzzles, with the whole family gathered admiringly around you—unless, that is, you want to protect your progeny, during their impressionable years, from witnessing serious violations of linguistic norms.


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246-That’s-Just-Preverted!.puz

246-That's-Just-Preverted!.pdf

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246: That’s Just Preverted!


A crossword of mine appears today in the Wall Street Journal.


Crossword 245: Change of Pace

 

John Callcott Horsley, Critics on Costume, Fashions Change

 

After five weeks of unrelenting cruciverbal depression, it’s time for a change of pace; and that’s exactly what this week’s puzzle provides. Of course, you’ll nonetheless find in it all the usual qualities of puzzles on this site:  norm-shattering formal innovation, the latest in culture, and a daring willingness to speak truth to power.  (Also some wordplay.)


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245-Change-of-Pace.puz

245-Change-of-Pace.pdf

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245 Change of Pace

Crossword 244: Down in the Mine

 

John William Godward, The Jewel Casket

 

We at David Alfred Bywaters’s Crossword Cavalcade and Weekly Victorian Novel Recommender aren’t satisfied with the gems of wordplay that can be purchased in the public marketplace.  We prefer to dig our own out of the bowels of the earth, braving darkness and damp, noxious vapors and the ever-present threat of semantic collapse—all so that you, the solver, can adorn your mental domicile at our expense, little suspecting the cost.  But we wouldn’t have it any other way.


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244-Down-in-the-Mine.puz

244-Down-in-the-Mine.pdf

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244 Down in the Mine

Crossword 243: Downplay

 

Edward Robert Hughes, Dream Idyll (A Valkyrie)

 

I give you fair warning:  the Downs in this puzzle (at least the themed ones) are all Across.  Now that’s just the kind of startling, long-overdue innovation you’ve come to expect of my puzzles; but, like most wonderful things, it comes at some risk:  if you’re subject to vertigo, you might want to solve the puzzle while lying on your side.


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243-Downplay.puz

243-Downplay.pdf

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243 Downplay

Crossword 242: What a Downer!

 

Frederick Daniel Hardy, Sorrowful News 

 

I meant this website to be a cheerful place, filled with smiles and sunshine, and look what’s happened!  Why, I wonder?  Maybe it’s the crossword genre itself, which necessarily makes us cross and takes us down.  As I’ve said before, I think the time is overdue for a radical reconceptualization of the form, one that ceases to valorize traditional numerical hierarchies (why should 2 always be greater than 1?), one that shatters the old boundaries imposed by binary grids of black squares and white squares, one that replaces the cross with the happy, the down with the up.  I’m working on it.  


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242-What-a-Downer.puz

242-What-a-Downer.pdf

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242 What a Downer