Look what I found when I googled Neville Fogarty? A 11-year-old Jeopardy!
"Back to School Week" (October 3, 2000) contestant with a pet fish
named Bob Saget. So don't feel bad if you're stumped by his puzzles.
Neville
started constructing puzzles in 2008, and he has been published by the
LA Times, NY Times & the Chronicle of Higher Education.
Neville just started a new site and publishes a new puzzle every Friday. Click here and check his offering today.
Tell us a bit about your background. How did you develop an interest in crossword construction?
I started solving crosswords regularly in the summer of 2007 in
preparation for an audition for the short-lived game show "Merv
Griffin's Crosswords." Later that year, I tried writing one myself just
to see if I could make one by hand. My first puzzle wasn't perfect, but
it was pretty fun to make, so I spent the next few months reading up on
construction online and refining my skills by writing a weekly puzzle
for my school newspaper.
You've been
making both themed and themeless puzzles (MONEY SHOT!), which one do you enjoy
more and what are the major differences in your approach?
Slipping phrases like MONEY SHOT into a themeless is great fun, but I
really love writing a good themed puzzle. There's just something about
finding some phrases with a common bond or a neat phrase to riff off of.
I'm not giving up on either of them.
When I go to write a themed puzzle, I usually already have a theme
in mind. either I've noticed a cool pattern in a word, or a bit of
wordplay somewhere. Sometimes I'll have stumbled across a nice
"tie-together" entry for a theme, and I'll work backwards from that.
Then it's a lot of brainstorming to come up with the best theme entries
possible before I go to fill the grid. Since I've been blogging over at
the Crossword Fiend, I've become very conscious of what themes we've
seen before and what is and isn't fun for the solver. I try to keep this
in mind when I'm constructing: What experience am I bringing to the
solver? I want them to be able solve a fresh, new puzzle each time, so I
have to put my themed puzzles through a lot of internal scrutiny.
With a themeless puzzle, it's a similar story, but I have some more
leeway. I don't have to have a new idea tying the puzzle together.
Instead, I get to rely on picking out some fun names and phrases to make
a puzzle shine. Most of my themelesses feature a pinwheel-type pattern -
stacks of 8 to 10-letter entries in each corner. I usually pick out one
entry for each corner and then try to fill around it, making each
segment of the puzzle as lively as possible.
As a young solver/constructor, what kind of themes/fill fascinate you
the most and what kind of themes/fill do you dread seeing in a puzzle?
I love seeing contemporary titles (books, TV shows, etc.), full names of
well-known people, and current turns of phrase in crosswords. I
usually don't mind when things push the so-called breakfast test. I
don't need a theme to be mindbending to enjoy it; just something that
has interesting phrases and clever clues.
I'm not a fan of entries that I can't reason out if I haven't heard of
them, especially ones where the crossing is unhelpful. This mainly
applies to unfamiliar abbreviations crossing not-so-well-known names
that don't even look like names to me.
Which part do you normally spend the most time on in the construction process: theme brainstorming, gridding or cluing?
I really enjoy cluing, and I can bang it out pretty quickly, usually.
Even for themed puzzles, I probably spend the most time filling the
grid. I tend to write more than one grid just to make sure I'm making as
fun a puzzle as possible (or because I've worked myself into an
undesirable corner), so the time spent gridding tends to add up.
Which is the best puzzle you've made and why?
Now that's a hard one; it often feels like whichever one I'm working on
is my current favorite! I'm quite partial to the most recent themeless
puzzle I posted on my new webpage: http://nevillefogarty.wordpress.com/2012/09/14/puzzle-9-themeless-3/. But if you ask me next week, it'll likely change.
Wat puzzles do you solve every day and which constructors do you find most inspiring?
I solve the Los Angeles Times and New York Times puzzle everyday like
clockwork. I think my short list of inspirational constructors would
include Mike Nothnagel and Doug Peterson, primarily for their awesome
themeless puzzles, Brendan Emmett Quigley and Matt Gaffney for their
ability to mess with my head, and Merl Reagle for his overall punniness.
I wish I could steal some of their abilities!
Besides crossword, what else do you do for fun?
Most of my time away from crosswords is spent working toward a PhD in
mathematics - I'm a second-year graduate student at the University of
Kentucky. But beyond that, I love playing racquetball, video games and
ultimate frisbee.