Crossword News November 2022
The October Prize Puzzle was Nemesis by Chalicea. The theme
was the nursery rhyme of the Gingerbread Man. The Gingerbread Man challenged
the duck, horse, cow, pig, dog and little old lady and man to catch him. He met
his nemesis with the fox.
Here are some of the comments from solvers.
A puzzle on the easy side, even for Chalicea, but one
featuring an amazing number of place and language locations, from Scotland to
among others, Europe, the Middle East, the Indian Ocean, Australia and New
Zealand, China, the USA and back to Scotland. I have eaten my share of
Gingerbread Men, but didn't realise there was a fairy tale involved. The Wiki
article gives a lot of interesting detail on folk tales which involve runaway
food items, and which have been found in nearly as many societies as Chalicea
visited in her puzzle. Thanks, Chalicea.
After last month's very challenging "Postcard"
from Hedge Sparrow, this seemed quite straightforward but I will admit that I
had to resort to the internet to remind myself what happened to the Gingerbread
man in the end. Well, it was a very long
time ago that I last sang it! Thank you
Chalicea for a charming puzzle.
In contrast to last month's puzzle this was much more
straightforward but no less enjoyable. As always with Chalicea, a set of neat
clues, lots of thematic material and pleasing endgame. Thanks to Chalicea and the Crossword Centre.
There were 64 entries, of which 8 were marked incorrect. The
lucky winner, picked from the electronic hat was David Beamish, from London,
who will soon be receiving a prize of Chambers Crossword Dictionary which was
donated by Chambers.
There is a full solution at https://crosswordcentre.blogspot.com/2022/11/solution-to-nemesis-by-chalicea.html
There is still lots of time to send an entry for the
November challenge, Big Bang Theory by Poat. https://crosswordcentre.blogspot.com/2022/10/crossword-centre-prizepuzzle-november.html
The December Prize Puzzle will be our traditional offering
from Eclogue. Watch out for Seasons Greetings XIV.
***
The next Listener Crossword Setters’ Dinner will be held at the Mercure Hotel,
Bristol on 4th March 2023. It is 50 years since Ploutos (Mike Rich)
held the first dinner at the Cock Tavern in 1973 and the dinner will celebrate
this golden anniversary. Guests will be invited to wear gold and special gold
ties are to be made for the men and gold brooches for the women.
***
It's that time of the year when you might be looking for Christmas presents. I
would suggest you look at the 3D puzzle calendar for 2023. With a puzzle a
month set by some of the top setters, it makes a beautiful gift for a
cruciverbalist, as well as making a contribution to charity. You can order a
copy from this link -
https://3dcalendarpuzzles.co.uk/shop/3d-crosswords-2023-calendar-printed/
***
Congratulations to the Magpie magazine on its 20th anniversary. It
was founded 20 years ago after the death of Mike Rich who published Tough
Puzzles, The Guardian had an interview with the founders of the Magpie,
Mark Goodliffe and Simon Anthony.
https://www.theguardian.com/crosswords/crossword-blog/2022/oct/31/twenty-years-of-the-magpie-crossword-magazine?CMP=share_btn_tw
***
Having tried a few OCR apps on my PC and Mac, I have found Photo Scan for PC
gives the best results. To test it I got it read a photo of a page of clues. It
worked very well with the need for only a few changes. The puzzle was a Letters
Latent puzzle by Ximenes. I have put the puzzle on the blog. https://crosswordcentre.blogspot.com/p/ximenes-lett6ers-latent.html
I also noticed that the link to the Double Entendre puzzle by Ximenes was
defunct, so I have updated it. http://www.crossword.org.uk/double.htm
***
The Crossword Club is being relaunched with its November 2022 issue, where each
of the three prize puzzles has a chance to win a copy of the forthcoming 2023
3D Crossword Calendar (entry is open to subscribing members only). This relaunch issue is available free to
anyone emailing a request to: clubcrosswords@gmail.com
***
On the day that Rishi Sunak became PM there was this very timely clue in the
Telegraph crossword, with an equally timely answer:
Rishi's scratching head in horror after Conservative
catastrophe (6)
***
If you want to practise your wall skills for Only Connect, I can certainly
suggest the Pussgrid site. Lots of walls and 3 minutes to try to solve them. I
find it great fun.
https://puzzgrid.com/
***
Quiz master, Frank Paul, has published a new book, The Twelve Quizzes of
Christmas. He was recently interviewed by Alan Connor in the Guardian.
https://www.theguardian.com/crosswords/crossword-blog/2022/nov/14/crossword-book-club-artist-quizmaster-frank-paul-the-12-quizzes-of-christmas
The Guardian published some of Frank Paul’s word puzzles.
They are a real pleasure to solve and you can try them here. https://www.theguardian.com/science/2022/oct/31/can-you-solve-it-brilliant-brainteasers-by-the-wizard-of-witty-wordplay
***
And finally, one for the pedants. The Washington Post published this
correction.
The crossword puzzle in the Oct 23 Washington Post Magazine included an
incorrect clue for 95 Across (“Fictional graduate of Springfield High School
during the 1970s”). The answer HOMER refers to Homer Simpson, who didn’t
graduate from high school in the 1970s because, during that time, he didn’t
pass Remedial Science 1A, as seen in a season 4 episode of “The Simpsons”, “The
Front”.
Best wishes
Derek
Now on Mastodon – DerekHarrison@mastodon.iriseden.eu
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