google.com, pub-2774194725043577, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 L.A.Times Crossword Corner

Advertisements

Feb 12, 2011

Saturday February 12, 2011 Barry Silk

Theme: None

Total words: 68

Total blocks: 27

Barry frames this themeless with eight 9s, six of which are stacked in the upper left & lower right, crossed by another triple columns of Down 8s.

Let's look at his marquee answers:

1A. Breakfast-on-the-run choice for some : COLD PIZZA. Has to be his seed entry. Fantastic answer. Two Zs in action.

15A. Work on a table : OPERATION. For doctors/nurses.

17A. Driven to have : DEAD SET ON

53A. Sitcom array : ONE LINERS. Or Jazzbumpa's blog array. Full of zingers.

57A. Boarded en masse : PILED INTO

59A. Up-and-down time? : SKI SEASON. Tricky clue: "Up-and-down". Maybe HeartRx/Gunghy nailed it.

11D. Album before "Help!" : BEATLES VI. Got via crosses.

30D. Strawberry dessert : SHORTCAKE. Sweet!

How long do you normally spend on a Saturday puzzle? I always punt after 30 minutes. Forgive me, Father, for I always cheat!

Across:

10. Put to shame : ABASH. See this word in "unabashed" form more often.

16. Martinique volcano : PELEE.Not familiar with Mount Pelée. Wikipedia says it's French for "Bald Mountain".

18. Not as bright : PALER. We also have 36D. Having a better chance of recognizing : NEARER TO. Two ER adjective suffixes in this grid.

19. Structural opening? : INFRA. Only know the noun infrastructure.

20. When parents may need to call their kids : MEAL TIME

22. Four-time Daytona 500 champ Yarborough : CALE. Tell us more about him, eddyB!

23. Resident on the Arno : PISAN. We often see ARNO clued as "Pisa's river" or "Florence's river".

25. Sediment : LEES

26. Hot feeling : IRE

27. Corporeal : BODILY

28. Fluid dynamics phenomenon : EDDY. Hey, another shout-out to eddyB. Can't believe your Eros & Eons mix-up on Thursday.

29. Makes privy to : LETS IN ON

31. Arcade game nos. : PTS (Points)

33. Parades : SASHAYS. Lucina has not used this word for some time.

34. Croat's neighbor : SLOVENE. Of Slovenia.

38. München-to-Wien heading : OST. German for "east". München = Munich. Wien= Vienna. I drew a blank.

39. Designer of Dulles Airport's main terminal : SAARINEN (Eero). First time we see his surname in a grid.

40. Service expert : ACER. Tennis.

43. Meat garnishes : ASPICS

45. GPS determination : LAT (Latitude)

46. Encircled : GIRT

47. Busy : IN USE. As in restroom.

48. Entangle : MIRE

49. Knighted son of King Ban : LANCELOT. Wow, I never know Lancelot's father was a king.

51. Speleologist : CAVER. Speleology is the study of caves. I only know spelunk/spelunking.

52. Words after follow or blow : A LEAD. Didn't come to me quickly.

56. Like some investments : RISKY

58. Colorado's __ Park : ESTES

Down:

1. Will supplements : CODICILS. Complete stranger to me. Looks like it's related to code.

2. Place to set up camp : OPEN AREA

3. Ads, perhaps : LEAFLETS

4. Titled rapper : DR. DRE. First time we have his full name.

5. "El Condor __": Simon & Garfunkel song : PASA. Here is a clip. Boomer loves Simon & Garfunkel. He just bowled another 300 this week.

6. Mineral suffix : ITE. As in hematite.

7. ZENMED target : ZIT. Was ignorant of the brand ZENMED. Manufactured by whom?

8. Enhances the details : ZOOMS IN

9. Temper : ANNEAL

10. Range, e.g.: Abbr. : APPL (Appliance)

12. Teamed up : ALLIED

13. Looked : SEEMED

14. Joan of Arc's crime : HERESY

21. Wherever : ANY PLACE

23. Clipped style : PONYTAIL. Like this. Was thinking of JFK's clipped accent. Not hairstyle.

24. Lifetime exchange for many : I DOs

27. Fairness obstacle : BIAS

32. Rocky crests : TORS. Classic crosswordese.

34. Je ne __ quoi : SAIS

35. Invigorates : ENLIVENS

37. Begins : ENTERS ON

39. It means "traveling companion" in Russian : SPUTNIK. I am quite fond of Obama's "Sputnik moment". You? 

40. Blazing : AGLARE

41. Tadalafil brand : CIALIS. Don't know the meaning of "Tadalafil".

42. __ Evans, Chubby Checker's birth name : ERNEST. New trivia to me.

44. Peepers : SNOOPS

48. Crosswords in the 1920s, e.g. : MANIA. This is true.

50. Slow Churned ice cream : EDY'S

51. Fungi ending : CIDE. Eww!

54. "The Book of __": 2010 Denzel Washington film : ELI. Have you seen the movie? Good?

55. "__ Troyens": Berlioz opera : LES. Wikipedia says Les Troyens = The Trojans.


C.C.

Feb 11, 2011

Interview with James Sajdak

Some constructors specialize in earlier week puzzles, some focuses on themeless. James Sajdak is one of the very few who have delighted us with both. I always like James's grid layouts because they often feature long, lively non-theme entries.

James only started construction in 2005, but he has been published by LA Times, NY Sun, NY Times. 


Hope you enjoy this nugget-filled interview. I certainly did.

What's your background and how did you get into crossword construction?

I remember watching my father solve the Chicago Daily News puzzle after dinner (pen solver) back in the 1960s. During college, a couple of friends and I did the Chicago Tribune puzzle in the Student Union every morning before classes. My wife Kathy and I moved to Canada where we got busy raising a family, a big garden and chickens. Puzzles, except for the Sunday NY Times puzzle, were put on the back burner. After we moved back to our Midwest roots, I returned to the UW Madison, got a degree in English linguistics and began teaching English as a Second Language in Madison, Wisconsin. I got bit again by the puzzle bug in the ‘90s and in 2005 I felt an urge to try to make a puzzles of my own. My first two were published by Wayne Williams, then I was lucky enough to work with editor Peter Gordon, who shepherded me through an A, E, I, O, U puzzle and I was hooked. Peter, and then Rich Norris, taught me much about theme selection and constructing that I was unaware of. I thank them dearly. They each have their own editorial hand and both gave me an education into what goes into a well-crafted crossword.

How would you describe your puzzle style? I noticed that your grids often feature plenty of long non-theme answers.

Longer fill generally makes for a good puzzle. It opens up the grid so solvers don’t get stuck in a corner that has only one way in, usually through a theme entry. Secondly, longer entries offer many more options in selecting colorful words and phrases that evoke amusing, bizarre or endearing pictures in the mind. The short stuff is limited, so you end up with a lot of unwelcome abbreviations and crosswordese. Of course, as a constructor, I’ve sometimes bitten the bullet and used a less than desirable entry to aid in making the rest of the puzzle better.

Style-wise, I feel like I’m pretty open to anything, but I like feel-good, fun puzzles. For example, BABY GRAND, SWEETHEART DEAL, HONEY TREE, and SUGAR PLUM FAIRY. I love a good love theme and dislike war references. I make a conscious effort to avoid things like A TEST, N TEST, DESERT STORM and other militaristic references.

Which part do you normally spend the most time on, in the construction process: theme brainstorming, gridding or cluing?

 
Theme brainstorming is always a catch-as-catch-can affair. I might go a month without a clever theme idea. Then, in a week, I might come up with a couple of sparkly ideas. I have notebooks and scraps of paper with half-finished, or half-baked, theme ideas. They come from everywhere, but I don’t generally use reference books in adding to my “seed” theme entries. The most in-the-language theme entries come from things I hear, see or read as I go through the day.

Coming up with a decent grid can be a bear when I have a large number of theme letters in a puzzle. And making an acceptable grid for an eight or ten theme Sunday puzzle can be murder.

Cluing, for me, is the most creative part of the whole process. A good mix of straight, humorous, gimme (you’ve got have a way in) and ornery clues is what I like in puzzles I solve. That’s what I strive for when I write clues.
 

You've been constructing both themed and themeless puzzles. Which ones do you enjoy more? And what are the major differences in your approach?

For me, a cool theme is hard to beat and challenges me to place theme entries just-so to allow for a smooth grid. Cluing theme entries is the most satisfying part of constructing. I try to make myself laugh, a first step to making editors and solvers laugh too.

I will often work on a themeless puzzle when the theme muse is busy elsewhere (other contructors?). I keep a list of eight- to fifteen-letter special phrases I have encountered, especially those with a scrabbly quality. I’m not a master of the low word count themeless puzzles or stacked 15 letter entries. When I do a themeless, I try to remember that the whole puzzle is fill, so I’m always looking for colorful shorter fill as well. There’s not going to be any humor added by a set of related theme entries, so the amusement must come from all the entries. I have done a couple of themeless puzzles with “mini-themes,” (GIRL FROM IPANEMA, TOWN WITHOUT PITY, for example, with two balancing song titles) and I like these hybrid types.


What kind of reference books/websites do you use for theme entry selection assistance and clue accuracy checks?

As I said, I try to avoid reference books when I’m coming up with theme entries, since it adds some iffy stuff to my possibilities and takes my mind out of the language as we speak and hear it. Once I do have theme entries, I look for Google hits and check Cruciverb.com website for previous usage. Cruciverb.com is a great site to see if a theme idea has already been done. Google is also good to find some lesser known fact to use in a clue (crosswords as an educational tool.) I use Wikipedia only for broad overviews of a topic or entry.

My go-to dictionary is Random House Unabridged. I also love to dig into my atlas to find geographical names to create alliterative clues. (Barcelona bloom) FLOR.

I read blogs like yours and Amy Reynaldo’s to see how my and fellow constructor’s puzzles are received by our audience. That can be either an ego-boosting or humbling experience, but I think it keeps me from being complacent in making puzzles.


You've been quite prolific since you had your first puzzle with the NY Sun in 2006. Where do you find your theme inspirations and how do you maintain such productivity and originality?
 
Prolific, perhaps, but names like Patrick Berry, Dan Naddor and lately, John Lampkin pop up so frequently that I can’t think of myself as particularly prolific. Theme inspirations may visit anytime and anyplace, and, when they do I gather them in.

What kind of puzzles do you solve every day and which constructors do you find most inspiring?

I solve the LAT and NYT every day. On Sunday, I might also try Merl Reagle or the Boston Globe, but that’s a lot of boxes to fill in. I also really like what Patrick Berry is doing in his Friday Chronicle of Higher Education puzzles. I probably solve about 15 to 20 puzzles a week. I am not a speed solver, to say the least.

As for constructors, Patrick Berry has a combination of innovative theme ideas, constructing skill and precision in cluing that’s hard to beat. I like Joe DiPietro and have admired his clever style for many years. Bob Klahn’s clues are to die (laughing) for. Liz Gorski’s grid ideas are out of this world. There are another dozen or more constructors, both those who have been creating for many years and the new generation, that I really admire and would like to emulate.

Besides crosswords, what else do you do for fun?

We’re outdoorsy types. My wife Kathy and I do a lot of hiking and biking. We’re birders, snorkelers, and we’ve even tried snowshoeing (after all, we live in Wisconsin.) Reading, of course, is a big part of our leisure time (after all, we live in Wisconsin—long winters!) I listen to a lot of music, don’t watch much TV.

Finding laughs in everyday life, bizarre news stories and even on the mainstream news is an ongoing goal in my life. Humor is a healing force in our tough times and, I hope, in my puzzles.

Thanks for the opportunity to share my philosophy of constructing (and life) on your blog.