Quizzes & Puzzles0 min ago
Listener 4309: Shades Of Green By Gos
41 Answers
Thanks to Gos for featuring one of my favourites. I did think, though, that many of the clues were Times Cryptic (or even the easy cryptic) standard rather than Listener. It must have been hard to get this to work, so I suppose we can forgive two OED-only lights.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Midazolam writes ...but I cannot forgive the 3 unches in a 6 letter entry, 4 unches in 8 letter entries, especially when there are already 2 in 5's and 3 in 7's. I am not a strict Ximenean but there surely should be a limit.
I totally agree (and I could 2 unches in a 4-letter word to his list). It's not that the unching here is unfair, since the clues were very easy, especially the downs, half of which I solved as I read them, but it's the complete lack of conformity to editorial guidelines for the Listener. In any case, why construct a grid that forces you to write easy clues? Apart from the excessive unches there's the inelegance of the grid with the continuous line of ten bars spanning each side of the central black square. These virtually divide the grid into two halves for no thematic reason.
Obviously what has produced this result is the desire for real words in the grid after changes (something I admire) and the preservation of symmetry. But since the perimeter of the grid lacks symmetry I cannot see why the setter didn't abandon symmetry altogether in the interests of a far more satisfactory grid.
I totally agree (and I could 2 unches in a 4-letter word to his list). It's not that the unching here is unfair, since the clues were very easy, especially the downs, half of which I solved as I read them, but it's the complete lack of conformity to editorial guidelines for the Listener. In any case, why construct a grid that forces you to write easy clues? Apart from the excessive unches there's the inelegance of the grid with the continuous line of ten bars spanning each side of the central black square. These virtually divide the grid into two halves for no thematic reason.
Obviously what has produced this result is the desire for real words in the grid after changes (something I admire) and the preservation of symmetry. But since the perimeter of the grid lacks symmetry I cannot see why the setter didn't abandon symmetry altogether in the interests of a far more satisfactory grid.
Easy enough, with the shades of green (three of them, I suppose) providing a rather forced theme. Contendo, the anniversary - in the UK at least - occurs today, 31 August.
I'm assuming that the omission of the right-hand edge of the grid (in the hard-copy newspaper version) is a type-setting bludner and not somehow connected to the theme. The last time it happened, imaginary origami was required.
Can't recall the theme clearly enough to know what the black square is meant to signify, unless it's just an allusion to the activities of the hunted. If so, it seems a bit weak.
I'm assuming that the omission of the right-hand edge of the grid (in the hard-copy newspaper version) is a type-setting bludner and not somehow connected to the theme. The last time it happened, imaginary origami was required.
Can't recall the theme clearly enough to know what the black square is meant to signify, unless it's just an allusion to the activities of the hunted. If so, it seems a bit weak.
I am surprised that some who are willing to spend several hours cracking a tough puzzle don't seem to have the time to watch source material of this quality, after having spent what can have been no more than an hour on solving this one. Having solved it in about that time, I pulled out my collection of the evergreen source material in the different media in which it exists and spent an enjoyable couple of hours revisiting it. For those who have never experienced it, and are open-minded enough to try, it will last in your minds for much longer than this puzzle will. It should not, incidentally, be compared with (7,4)--the only common factors are the players featured here.
I have often gone from crossword to experience the source, Three men in a boat for example, or revisit a source (the voyage of the argo (Magpie) or Animal farm) or to experience a new experience in music (I am not sure thanks are in order there Quinapalus!) and I will, maybe, one day, sometime, get round to indulging in the theme or the source, and I am sure that (3,11,9) is truly (11), but at the moment I have yet to catch up on the fourth Underworld film (awakening apparently), the third series (season / whatever) of Being Erica, 4379 new Clive Cussler novels, even more Julia Donaldson efforts. I simply have run out of time to experience the old while the new is still being generated!
So once I have caught up on the 4388 new Clive Cusslers I may return to the theme and indulge... but by then there may be something new, or a remake or a reboot to draw my attention.
I am still 38, today feeling 83. Managed to make a perfect toad in the hole, with no sticking of the Yorkshire pud component, no splitting or burning. Kids still picked out only the sausage component... do they not realise the number efforts sacrificed to the god of Yorkshire puddings and toads in the holes before they received that. Ingrates.
eldest (5) got his hands on camouflage cream today and decided to make himself "invisible" with it. Granted he was less visible blacked up (note he is 5, and there are no racist overtones) with the stuff given that everything surrounding him had impassively achieved the same muted blackness. But, hardly invisible.
After much washing, he still had black rings around his eyes and still looks like some sort of deeply miserable goth (or happy emo kid... similar points me thinks on the sliding scale of teenage looks).
Still 38 and there are now 4424 Clive Cussler novels to catch up on.
So once I have caught up on the 4388 new Clive Cusslers I may return to the theme and indulge... but by then there may be something new, or a remake or a reboot to draw my attention.
I am still 38, today feeling 83. Managed to make a perfect toad in the hole, with no sticking of the Yorkshire pud component, no splitting or burning. Kids still picked out only the sausage component... do they not realise the number efforts sacrificed to the god of Yorkshire puddings and toads in the holes before they received that. Ingrates.
eldest (5) got his hands on camouflage cream today and decided to make himself "invisible" with it. Granted he was less visible blacked up (note he is 5, and there are no racist overtones) with the stuff given that everything surrounding him had impassively achieved the same muted blackness. But, hardly invisible.
After much washing, he still had black rings around his eyes and still looks like some sort of deeply miserable goth (or happy emo kid... similar points me thinks on the sliding scale of teenage looks).
Still 38 and there are now 4424 Clive Cussler novels to catch up on.
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