RM and EP on the Monday I almost never do — the clues always seem very messy. (Also you shouldn’t assume that anyone for Fairfax reads this forum or that any of the Fairfax setters – apart from DA – do either), DH obviously comes from some other planet. I avoid the Monday crossword because it contains the solution to the DA. You could also check out the Financial Times and Independent crosswords. Cryptic crossword No 28,242 Published: 17 Sep 2020 . still breezes through the other SMH crosswords, but usually ends up throwing DA on the floor and stomping on it and swearing before I phone her on Friday evening (‘when the sun is over the yard-arm’) and swapping notes with her.
A joyless solve for me. DH crosswords have all the hallmarks of an incompetent setter who works him/herself into corners, and then uses some word completing internet application to find words that fit the unfortunate combinations that he/she is left with from time to time. Click here for instructions on how to enable JavaScript in your browser. @Ian: Araucaria’s 90th birthday was yesterday. The Christmas DA was the second or third DA I’ve finished without assistance or collaboration, after more than ten years of trying. Stay connected and keep in …
It is also an ideal cryptic crossword for beginners to tackle. I don’t know if DS was the Saturday cruciverbalist back then, and for a good five or six years I paid no attention to who wrote the cryptic. I refer to him D*** H**d. DH educates and expands one’s vocabulary through a logical way of solving the clue. At that time the challenge was to get them out during morning tea, but it got to a stage where I finished them too quickly and then had to put up with my colleagues talking about football.
Favourites are Araucaria (who we may not have for much longer, he’s pushing 90) and Paul. This is easier than avoiding Saturday’s crossword, which I used to have to do before DA’s move to Saturday in The Age. DH apparently still using the same method – digging himself into a corner and then employing various esoteric sources to unearth some weird word/words to compensate for this lack of forethought.
Set by: Qaos. used to do all the Age/SMH crosswords, even had an online subscription to them for a year, but sort of outgrew them.
I was introduced to cryptics via some friends each Saturday morning about ten years ago now. Am with you Peter W. Don’t know why I attempted it, but it was early morning, looking for a distraction, and the Guardian cryptics don’t come up until 9am. A cryptic crossword is published every weekday in the Guardian September 2020. I shouldn’t have time, but I make it. Time on your hands? In order to post comments, please make sure JavaScript and Cookies are enabled, and reload the page. http://www.dillgroup.ucsf.edu/~grocklin/smh/2009-08-12_Wed_DP.puz About Cryptic Crosswords Although the crossword puzzle was invented in the United States (by an Englishman), cryptic crosswords are a British creation. KathyL. I did them off and on over the years, interspersed with The Times, until 7 years ago. While I certainly share your distaste for DH and his penchant for the wantonly recondite, I wouldn’t rate DS too far ahead … I wince at his strained wordplay far too often. But it’s really daylight between DA and the rest. Bring back EP! I’ve tried about 15 of the 160 in the book so I am hopeful. She always starts with the first clue being a longish anagram. I blinked and finished it. Same old lack of any planning in setting a satisfying challenge. I’ve asked this question before, but there’s a whole bunch of other people around these traps these days, so I thought I’d ask again: how do you rate the other cryptic compilers in the SMH or The Age? From time to time, DP can deliver a really pleasing crossword. Required fields are marked *. mixing up the letters of a synonym rather than the letters in front of me!).
If people don’t complain, they are unlikely to do anything about it. So what happened to EP today (Monday 30/4/12). The first all-cryptic crossword in English was created in 1926 by poet and translator Edward Powys Mathers, who called himself Torquemada after the Spanish Grand Inquisitor.
So now I get frustrated with DS and I am virtually a cruciverbal monogamist. Cryptic crossword #28. Instead we get LR with silly linked clues. I counted 13 whole anagrams in today’s DH, many for obscure words. The Grauniad cryptic was (sort of) a tribute to him, and the man himself has today’s puzzle. I just dipped into them willy-nilly, whenever I had the chance and I felt the need, really. DH still rubbish, given his effort in Fairfax Tuesday 7 Jan 2014. Some beautifully constructed clues in it, eg/ Character with whom it’s rash to play poker, for a start (4-5) = CARD-SHARP, I started my cryptic puzzling with DS and got into the rhythm of his/her (?) They’ve had pseudonyms on their puzzles for decades, and this has allowed the setters to develop their own styles.
Currently you have JavaScript disabled. DH I find an abomination — obscure words and simple wordplay that only serves to annoy. About time he was retired to make way for someone who can devise challenges to our capacity for lateral thinking (and a reasonable vocabulary).
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