Here’s a super-sized, pun-filled, meaty (especially 33 Down) puzzle for your solving pleasure.
I just got back from two weeks in Japan. I’ve got posts about Tokyo, Hakone, Takayama, Kanazawa, Kyoto, and Hiroshima on my travel blog. Please check them out if you’re interested!
See 5 Down. Photo taken in London, England, June 2017
Words: 38
Average Length: 5.53
19 Across was the seed, but the puns don’t stop there. I’m really happy with this grid design – it’s wide open with no 3-letter fill. You might well see it again!
Of all the overseas places I’ve visited – 99 and counting – Ireland is the friendliest. Although I don’t have a bit of Irish blood, I’ve never felt so at home anywhere else. The people are warm, quick to laugh, and hospitable beyond belief, and the scenery’s not too shabby either. And then there’s the literature: on an island of barely over 7 million people, seemingly every tenth person is a prize-winning author, poet, or playwright. (Given that books are my crack, I’ve crammed several Irish writers into this grid and clues, including several of my all-time favorites (Roddy Doyle, Kevin Barry, Maggie O’Farrell).)
The two seeds were 1 Down (which also accounts for the title) and 5 Down (because I’ve had the clue for a while and finally put the answer in a puzzle).
Flying over the Alps, March 2019 – about as close to outer space as I’m likely to get
Words: 72
Average Length: 5.22
I could have saved this puzzle for Earth Day, assuming it’s not outlawed by the Despoiler of All Things Precious and Good, but I’ve been making my way through Cixin Liu’s brilliant “Three-Body Problem” trilogy and felt compelled to publish it a month early.
Dessert (see 16 Across clue). My wife baked this cake a couple of weeks ago. It was even better than it looks!
Words: 72
Average Length: 5.25
The two grid-spanners were the seeds for this moderately challenging themeless. If you’ve never heard the song clued at 35 Across, here’s a link. It’s gorgeous.
“Checkpoint Charlie,” Berlin (see 16 Down). Note the juxtaposition between the sign and the McDonald’s. Photo taken July 2013.
Words: 40 (11×11)
Average Length: 5.15
This one started as a random idea – gee, I wonder how many times I could reasonably (without compromising fill) cram the most common word in the English language into a midi crossword? The answer: six as the word itself – with double credit going to certain post-punk band (23 Down) – as well as three more times where the letter string appears. The title references Porky Pig’s famous closing line in the Looney Tunes cartoons, which should make sense if you think about it.
I’m happy to shout out Tom Lehrer (6 Down), a long-time math professor at Harvard with a second career as a writer of satirical, mostly political songs. Here’s a link to the one in the puzzle, which isn’t political but does concern science, so maybe these days it’s somehow controversial after all.
Hungarian Parliament (see 13 Across) (Photo taken July 2023)
Words: 26
Average Length: 5.15
Unlike many comics from the ‘80s and early ’90s, Calvin & Hobbes holds up brilliantly. (Speaking of comic recommendations, I am besotted with Nathan W. Pyle’s gentle, funny, and profound Strange Planet webcomic. Check it out if it’s new to you.)
The title of this puzzle, of course, is one of Calvin’s alter egos. Interestingly – draw whatever conclusions you wish – I typed the title as “Spaceman Spliff” and didn’t notice until I’d finished cluing the grid.