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Listener 4231 - Vera By Elfman
40 Answers
After last week's toughie, I was hoping for an easy ride this week - especially as we are off on holiday very soon. So, my heart sank when I saw this mixture of truths, half truths and lies. Probably more by luck than skill, I now have the proverb and one of the three grids. Still plenty to do, but thanks for the fun Elfman. I wish that your timing had been better.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Decent enough puzzle but flawed as one can "cheat" with a sensibly worded Google that readily supplies the proverb. Armed with a few entries and given the relative simplicity of the grids, even allowing for unclued entries, it is not then difficult.
Back to last week's puzzle. Completed grids, got the instruction and know the theme but but but.....
Back to last week's puzzle. Completed grids, got the instruction and know the theme but but but.....
A strange solving procedure this week - the first 3 hours produced just 10 clues cold-solved. Then, as others have reported, it suddenly became clear (a bit like the Universe after 300,000 years or so) and the thing was polished off after another 2 hours or so. Nice to have finished it, but left feeling without the elation of a PDM. As with others, the alternates fell out first (was that grid easier to cross-ckeck, I wonder), then the lies and the truths last. Without the BRB on an iPad this would have been a nightmare though.
What a neat idea. Most enjoyable. Like Olichant, I got lucky early on, by chance solving the left-hand side of the left-hand grid, which led me to guess the proverb, with the help of Wilson's "Oxford Dictionary of English Proverbs" (much more interesting than Google). After that it fell out easily. Perhaps the fewer bewildered comments about a puzzle that contains "lies" the better, since bewilderment may stem from a lie, but, parenthetically, I thought that some of them were excellent.
I have three full grids but in my lying grid my fourth down sticks out like a sore thumb as not being a lie. If someone could explain it to me I'd be grateful and maybe the parsing of one across in the first grid too. I hope this isn't giving anything away. my email is [email protected]
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