Crosswords0 min ago
Listener Crossword 4513 Lost In Translation By Ottorino
25 Answers
A gentler one this week after last week's humdinger.
I enjoyed this; the penny drop and endgame was quite satisfying so thanks to Ottorino. Thanks also for educating me with something I never knew before!
Incidentally, did anybody else see the Grauniad crossword by Picaroon yesterday? It seems as though Picaroon is Kea and there were Listener related messages formed within the grid. It appears to be a 'mea culpa' on Kea's part and a 'thank you for getting me out of that mess' to Arcturus!
I enjoyed this; the penny drop and endgame was quite satisfying so thanks to Ottorino. Thanks also for educating me with something I never knew before!
Incidentally, did anybody else see the Grauniad crossword by Picaroon yesterday? It seems as though Picaroon is Kea and there were Listener related messages formed within the grid. It appears to be a 'mea culpa' on Kea's part and a 'thank you for getting me out of that mess' to Arcturus!
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No best answer has yet been selected by emcee. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Agreed that progress on this was much more straightforward than I expected. I really liked the thematic elements though, and following the down-clue instructions and the end of the preamble dropped pennies with satisfying clangs!
I'll look out Picaroon's crossword over the weekend, thanks for the heads-up emcee.
I'll look out Picaroon's crossword over the weekend, thanks for the heads-up emcee.
It certainly was a relief to have a grid fill that was more straightforward than it initially appeared. I went down various blind alleys before realising how the endgame worked (it doesn't help that I can't count) and so it was all the more satisfying when I got there. Despite having some familiarity with the theme I had never noticed the relevant fact before. Very enjoyable and neatly done - thanks Ottorino.
Re emcee's comment on the Guardian puzzle, according to a Who's Who list Picaroon is James Bryden, who also sets as Lavatch, not Kea. As far as I can see the puzzle is a tribute to Ross Beresford who designed the crossword compiling program, Tea and Sympathy. Every other row is thematic.I don't think there's any 'mea culpa' in it. A terrific puzzle so thanks for drawing our attention to it, emcee. The clues certainly had the elegance of Kea's.
After filling the grid of this week's Listener I thought I was in for a lengthy hunt when nothing jumped out immediately, but then it did jump out sharply.
An enjoyable puzzle on an unusual theme. Much easier than last week's, but I didn't find it a doddle.
After filling the grid of this week's Listener I thought I was in for a lengthy hunt when nothing jumped out immediately, but then it did jump out sharply.
An enjoyable puzzle on an unusual theme. Much easier than last week's, but I didn't find it a doddle.
Interesting, Scorpius. That's certainly one interpretation which may well be spot on. Two of the three rows you omit give "USER ILL ADVISED" and "MISMANAGED. RASH" hence I thought some error had occurred which Arcturus (Ross Beresford) had put right.
Also, "KEA" does appear in three of the consecutive unchecked letters between the columns beginning 3dn and 4dn.
Also, "KEA" does appear in three of the consecutive unchecked letters between the columns beginning 3dn and 4dn.
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