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Friday, 29 October 2021
Crossword Centre Prize Puzzle November 2021
Tuesday, 19 October 2021
Crossword News October 2021
Crossword News October 2021
The September Prize Puzzle was Juggling Jellyfish by
Chiffchaff. It celebrated INTERNATIONAL TALK LIKE A PIRATE DAY given by extra
letters in 31 clues. Thematic clues gave half of an oath given by Captain
Pugwash while the other half was entered in the grid.
First letters of
extra words in seven other clues give HAT and SHIP. PUGWASH replaces captain in
the completed grid and his hat is drawn in the space occupied by cap and he is
shown standing on his ship, cryptically represented by a drawing of a black pig
in the space occupied by pig. Juggling Jellyfish is something we felt Pugwash
ought to have said but didn’t, but he did utter the other phrases given by the
puzzle.
Here are some of the comments from solvers.
Took me a while to spot the theme, but a nice amusing moment
when the penny finally dropped. Wasn’t
the first pirate I thought of, but it should have been! Wondered a bit about the cryptic/thematic
final requirement – have opted for showing the black pig as a black pig and the
pirate hat literally, so hope that was what was intended.
Thanks Chiffchaff for filling a gap in my education by
informing me there is such a thing as International Talk Like A Pirate Day,
knowledge gained once I got past my fixation that we were dealing with Tintin in the puzzle.
Having three different types of clues, especially when extra letters could be
anywhere in the clue, added a bit of difficulty and at the end I wasn't really
sure as to whether I should be trying to draw a pirate ship or an actual black
pig. Given my total lack of artistic talent, an approximation to a sailing ship
got the vote.
Initially I found the puzzle to be great fun with some good
clues and I enjoyed the variation of the special solutions at 1 across
etc. I was intrigued to learn of the
International Talk Like a Pirate Day and cannot imagine how it had passed me by
until now. I do not know how younger
solvers would know of Captain Pugwash but I am old enough to have enjoyed the
double entendres (deliberate or not) at the time. So, it was not too difficult to see that
CAPTAIN should be replaced by PUGWASH.
Equally straightforward, HAT and SHIP should be the illustrations - but,
one thematically and one cryptically???
My best guess is that PIG should be replaced by a drawing of a black pig (that
being the name of the aforesaid Captain's vessel) and CAP replaced by a drawing
of the Captain's hat or possibly the skull and crossbones that adorned it. As you can tell, I was all at sea over the
final instruction and for me it slightly took the shine off an otherwise
excellent puzzle. Thank you, Chiffchaff.
There were 41 entries, of which 9 were marked incorrect. To
put solvers’ minds at rest, the marker accepted any black pig or black ship as
correct.
The lucky winners were Albert and Gail Busza, from Chiswick,
who will soon be receiving a prize of Chambers Crossword Dictionary, which has
been donated by Chambers.
A solution is available at https://crosswordcentre.blogspot.com/2021/10/solution-to-juggling-jellyfish-by.html
Chiffchaff is a collaboration of two popular setters, Hedge-sparrow and Vismut.
You still have lots of time to email your solution to
Masterpiece by Craft. https://crosswordcentre.blogspot.com/2021/09/crossword-centre-prize-puzzle-october.html
The November Prize
Puzzle will be A Good One by Hawk. This is Hawk’s first puzzle for the
Crossword Centre. Fairly new to setting, Hawk made his Listener debut on Valentine’s
Day 2021, with a puzzle leading to a heart-shaped box of chocolates. Hawk is
the pseudonym for Julian, an IT manager from Surrey. He enjoys setting puzzles
which give the solver some work to do in the endgame - “A Good One” is no
exception. He chose the name Hawk, as he wanted something a little bit
predatory, and all the Spanish inquisitors had been taken.
***
One of the toughest Listener crosswords of late was Variety Show by Enigmatist.
Although Enigmatist (John Henderson) publishes lots of crosswords under a
variety of pseudonyms, this was only his second Listener, the first being in
1993. I spent a few days solving some tough clues and gradually I made out the
partial names of the members of the Spice Girls. The final solution was a
representation of the group’s first album cover. What a fantastic puzzle!
However, I felt a bit cheated that most of the answers to those tough clues had
to be erased.
Alan Connor, in his Guardian blog, also describes how he
solved Variety Show.
https://www.theguardian.com/crosswords/crossword-blog/2021/oct/11/crossword-blog-a-really-really-hard-puzzle-enigmatist
On Listen with Others you can read how Enigmatist came up
with the idea and how Dave Hennings and Shirley Curran went about solving it.
https://listenwithothers.com/
***
This month sees the publication of the latest edition of Bradford's Crossword Solver's Dictionary.
This hardback edition is available at Amazon at £20 (RRP £25).
***
The history of GCHQ, Behind the Enigma,
is now available in paperback. It is the authorised history by John Ferris
detailing Britain’s cyber-intelligence agency and its code-breaking
achievements.
***
On our message board Phil Lloyd has announced this.
Now that social activities are becoming more of the norm
again, and that many of our number will have been double- or triple-jabbed, it
has been decided to cautiously resume our quarterly Listener gatherings at the
Sir John Oldcastle in Farringdon, on Saturday 30th October. This Wetherspoons
pub is at the junction of Farringdon Road and Greville Street, and a short walk
from Farringdon Station, west along Cowcross Street.
On the same weekend there will be John Henderson’s meet in
York. More info on https://www.fifteensquared.net/
***
On the Clue-writing Competition your challenge for OCTOBER is a STANDARD
CRYPTIC clue to YO-YO (2-2) by the closing date of MIDNIGHT BST SATURDAY 30th
OCTOBER.
http://www.andlit.org.uk/cccwc/main.php
In last month’s competition, a clue to BIBLIOMANIA, the
winner was John Tozer, with this clue.
What draws crowds to the bookshop? A Miliband bio oddly – Ed’s
latest is out
In a very close second place was Robert Vere with this clue.
I am in Bilbao madly collecting books
***
Best wishes
Derek