Crossword News April 2022
The March Prize Puzzle was Endless Shame by Chalicea.
Unclued entries gave Lambert Simnel and Perkin Warbeck. Both claimed to be
Richard, The Duke of York (the younger of the Princes in the Tower). Both were
ultimately recognised to be pretenders. The word PRETENDER had to be
highlighted.
Here are some of the comments from solvers.
Thanks go to Chalicea for a relatively easy puzzle, as we
have come to expect from this setter, but with two or three more obscure
answers to have you checking the dictionary - PIOYES, AUMIL, PHEAZAR. I did
initially search for IMPOSTOR in the grid, before alighting on PRETENDER. I'm sure many of us will remember the blue
pre-printed aerogram letter forms - a quick check online shows they were only
withdrawn in 2012 - though I don't remember them being called BLUEYS.
Thank you Chalicea for some new words (to me) all of them
very fairly clued. Consequently, the
grid was not too difficult to complete.
In this I was aided by immediately spotting the subject matter through a
combination of the title and the instructions.
Although it was over 50 years ago, I remember Perkin Warbeck and Lambert
Simnel from a school history lesson. (So you see, Sir, I was paying
attention! Well at least on that
day.) I suppose the unusual sound if the
names help them to stay in one's mind. I
seem to remember that the authors of 1066 And All That had some fun with them
too.
When I saw in the preamble (original version) that two names
"claimed to be ...", I immediately thought of my history lessons many
decades ago and pencilled in "LAMBERT SIMNEL" and "PERKIN
WARBECK" before looking at any clues. So filling the grid was unusually
quick! I had much more trouble with the highlighting. I quickly ruled out
IMPOSTOR but then spent a while looking at the letters of USURPER in rows 3 to
6, columns 1 to 3. It was a long time before I found PRETENDER! I did not see the revised preamble until
after that. The fact that Simnel purported to be the Earl of Warwick rather
than Duke of York bothered me at one stage, but the Wikipedia article says
"Simon noticed a striking resemblance between Lambert and the sons of
Edward IV, so he initially intended to present Simnel as Richard, Duke of York
...", so I wasn’t too fussed!
There were 67 entries and, although many solvers said the
puzzle was easy, there were 17 entries marked incorrect, often for invalid spellings
of PEIZE or PHEAZAR. The lucky winner, picked from the electronic hat, is Chris
Edwards, who will soon be receiving his prize.
There is a full solution with notes at https://crosswordcentre.blogspot.com/2022/04/endless-shame-by-chalicea-solution-and.html
You still have plenty time to send in your entry for the
April challenge, Round Robin XIV.
The May puzzle will be Mayhem Parva by Vagans.
David Thomson, who sets under the nom de guerre of ‘Vagans’,
is a life-long wordaholic, As a young academic he nearly worked for the Oxford
English Dictionary before turning his collar round and being ordained in the C
of E, ending up as a bishop. In retirement he has been able to give more time
to his continuing ’night job' as a mediaevalist, and to try turning his coat
round this time, from poacher to gamekeeper in the world of cryptic crosswords.
He has had puzzles published in the Listener, IQ, EV, Church Times and (as half
of ‘Ovid’) in the Magpie magazine, and there are more in the pipeline. He is
enormously grateful to those more experienced setters who have shown him the
ropes and helped him on his way.
After May there is a dearth of puzzles to publish. Once
again, we are looking for submissions for the summer months.
***
The first weekend of April saw the return of the American Crossword Puzzle
Tournament, after a virtual event in 2021. In the final it was another win for
Tyler Hinman, with Dan Feyer in close contention. You can find more information
at https://www.crosswordtournament.com/2022/index.htm
Rachel Fabi gives an excellent description of the tournament
in this NYT article https://www.nytimes.com/2022/04/11/crosswords/crossword-puzzle-tournament-diary.html
***
In March the Listener Crossword Setters’ Dinner was held in Stirling. I watched
much of the event on Zoom. You can download a copy of the quiz used at the
Listener Crossword Dinner from https://www.jetdoc.co.uk/crossword-and-quiz-links
Shirley Curran has put her photos from
the Listener Dinner weekend at https://www.flickr.com/photos/194321761@N03/sets/72177720297740321/
***
Congratulations to Mick Hodgkin, who will be taking over the post of puzzles
editor at The Times.
***
Congrats are also due to the Sunday Times who published puzzle No. 5000 at the
end of March. Editor, Peter Biddlecombe wrote this fascinating article https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/wordle-crossword-craze-sunday-times-puzzles-kdwc03g67
***
Exciting news! From today, the #SquareRoutes puzzle in #TheTimes can be played
interactively in the latest versions of "The Times & The Sunday
Times" phone and tablet apps, and on the Times website. Head straight to
the Puzzles section for a great new solving experience. Enjoy!
***
In the male-dominated world of crossword setters it is always pleasant to read
about a young woman who is having some success. Read more about Anna Shechtman
here https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/stories-60902128
***
It was very nice to have Robert Teuton dropping in for lunch. Now that he has a
granddaughter nearby, I expect to see more of him. He brought the prestigious
Crowther Cup with him, fresh from the engraver with Philip Wood’s name added. I
hope to have a photo of Philip with the cup soon.
Best wishes
Derek Harrison
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