ChatterBank2 mins ago
Listener 4073: Quartet by MynoT
72 Answers
I think we have turned a corner in terms of difficulty.
Another outstanding grid construction. The lack of unches made the task easier once the quotation was got, but the way it all tied in together was very pleasing. Some straightforward and some tough clues made this my favourite of the year so far.
Thanks MynoT
Another outstanding grid construction. The lack of unches made the task easier once the quotation was got, but the way it all tied in together was very pleasing. Some straightforward and some tough clues made this my favourite of the year so far.
Thanks MynoT
Answers
Best Answer
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.S436 It is indeed mostly cold solving to begin with. You might find it useful to concentrate on the letters that only crop up two or three times in a set of answers, and also to be clear about how many n-letter words there are in each set, which together with the alphabetical arrangement helps with the solving. I found it helpful to identify where n-letter words went in each quadrant, too. Once you have one quadrant sorted, its overlap into adjoining quadrants also helps. This is the kind of crossword which accelerates joyfully towards the end, especially once the quotation can be divined. Stick with it - it's a really pretty one.
I wasn't able to make an early start on this one -- and could have used the extra time! I managed to get one quadrant sorted out, and the overlaps from that helped in deciding how the others lay. I thought one or two definitions were a bit loose. I didn't get the quotation until I had about two-thirds of the grid filled, but once I had it the rest fell into place reasonably quickly. Overall a really good puzzle, beautifully constructed.
easylistener, to tell you which quadrant goes where is going against what this site is trying to maintain. All I can say is that once you have gained the longest answers (you should know how many there will be) in one of the quadrants they can be pieced together barring a few cells. If you have any shorter ones then this will confirm it for you and you can work from there. What I have said is probably no help and is what you know already. sorry
Nysterons, I am splitting hairs, I know, and I understand your word of warning, but, in fact, I believe that direction in the preamble is simply pointing out that one letter of each word goes over that black line, into the periphery - and that it must still be part of the word it is next to - i.e. it will sit at the beginning or end of the relevant word depending where in the grid the word is. It could be any of the letters of the word (first, a middle letter, or last). That way it makes sense.
Found this very hard going. Cold-solved 28 clues before I managed to start completing the grid. (Didn't help myself by having what I thought was a really good but wrong answer to the rather easy rock singer's clue.) Gradually pieced together the quotation without recognising what it was going to be and finally guessed the missing word in it. Bradford's is very helpful and several answers are not in older Chambers. Thank-you (I think) MynoT!
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