Quizzes & Puzzles3 mins ago
Listener 4087 Double Shuffling and Dealing by Auctor
65 Answers
We have found the clues a step up in difficulty from previous ones and had to go to the Internet for the quotation. Certainly not a puzzle for newcomers this week!
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Zabadak - when constructing a puzzle like this you need to ensure that each entry has to contain that letter of the quotation in that order. so e.g. "midazolam...." 1 across has to contain an "m". the next across entry an "i" etc. this can be a tricky grid to construct and not always appreciated. from the solver's point of view it doesn't really matter as it is a "normal" grid.
I am finding this one really difficult. I made the same mistake as midazolam to start with. I agree that the instructions are ambiguous. I now have the left half of the grid almost complete, but I am struggling to get any foothold into the right-hand side. I think I have got the hang of the affected definitions. Any suggestions as to what is an easyish clue to tackle on the right?
Morning all, just bookmarking the link.
Not yet really got going on this for footy reasons. I live in a small town, Poulton-le-Fylde, near Blackpool and am still reeling from the events of yesterday, when the local team secured promotion to the English Premier League. Non-footy fans cannot begin to believe how incredible that is. Nor me. Hey, cluelessJoe, I wonder what Simon Grayson thinks?
Hungover regards to all.
Not yet really got going on this for footy reasons. I live in a small town, Poulton-le-Fylde, near Blackpool and am still reeling from the events of yesterday, when the local team secured promotion to the English Premier League. Non-footy fans cannot begin to believe how incredible that is. Nor me. Hey, cluelessJoe, I wonder what Simon Grayson thinks?
Hungover regards to all.
With hindsight, it is much easier to find the author than to work out the quotation anagram. I'm a bit cross with myself, because I had a half-hearted search for the author but stopped just before I would have found him/her. That'll teach me to be lazy (except I don't think it will).
Memories of Sir Stanley, bobbycollins?
Memories of Sir Stanley, bobbycollins?
I can't be the only one thinking this is a thoroughly anti-climactic conclusion to an otherwise decent puzzle: a choice of wordsearching for some author who's nothing to do with the preceding solve, or plodding through 8,000 possibilities for an anagram of a quote I've probably never heard from some random play, again incidental to the puzzle.
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