Arts & Literature0 min ago
Listener 4107 - European Revolutions by Spud
104 Answers
A lovely ending! The "19 letters" is quite funny.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.poorsolver - thank you for the update here, I didnt meet Viking's crosswords much, but enjoyed the 4000 listener a couple of years ago. What will happen to the editorial team of the listener now?
Yes I was a test solver for spud and I know he is scouring the comments here. On balance, I think this one can go down as being one of the better crosswords of the year, which he is very pleased about.
Yes I was a test solver for spud and I know he is scouring the comments here. On balance, I think this one can go down as being one of the better crosswords of the year, which he is very pleased about.
Still in Asia, frustrated by multiple refusals by Times Crossword Club to log me in (and no access to my home e-mail), finally found a copy of the Saturday Times but it didn't have puzzle pages in .... all I can do is read all of your comments and wonder quite what Spud has done ! It's quite a good game, really ... trying to work out what the puzzle entails from afar with only the AB threads as clues ...
forced to throw in the towel on this one - I'm sure it's brilliant but I simply cannot unravel the "correct letters" for either the down or the scrambled clues.One or two of them simply won't make sense cluewise - 18 dn/21 ac/30 scr for example although I have the answers. I'm obviously overlooking a few small pointers - oh well, so nearly got there- but in the end life's too short to go on staring at this.
As usual trailing the rest of the field, only partly explained by a couple of days in Scarborough for the new Ayckbourn (brilliant). I've got the down clues thematic element and found it in the grid (and another dislocated element above it). Also got the unscrambled puzzle from the scrambled clues, so I should be nearly there, but I can't make sense of the correct letters from the across clues apart from the initial word which obviously relates to the puzzle. Am groping in the dark.
I have a completed and altered grid, but I am having problems with highlighting. Thirty-six of the relevant cells I can see in the traditional way, but eighteen of them do not have any traditional correspondence. Do I highlight as I find them, or have I missed an alternative that fits the traditional construction?
Yes - I have 19 cells changed. One of the examples I have a problem with is the unaltered one from the down clues - that cannot be highlighted in the traditional way. And I am also at a loss how to highlight another example which on first sight also does not belong in the traditional set but can be just about made to fit, though it then becomes impossible to highlight.
I do love trying to be very obscure:)
I do love trying to be very obscure:)
Philoctetes, as people have said earlier, you'll have to borrow your son's coloured pencils or nip down to the stationers.
No, Contendo, It sounds as if you are almost there. You just need to do a bit of spatial geometry to relate what you have to the grid. The element you have gives you the starting point you need. Clearly, you need more like that and if you remember that you are highlighting 54 squares in all, you know how many more you need and roughly where they should be (especially as you have found another).
No, Contendo, It sounds as if you are almost there. You just need to do a bit of spatial geometry to relate what you have to the grid. The element you have gives you the starting point you need. Clearly, you need more like that and if you remember that you are highlighting 54 squares in all, you know how many more you need and roughly where they should be (especially as you have found another).
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