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Listener 4296: Playgroup By Ifor
39 Answers
One of those frustrating ones where the last four clues took as long to sort out as the rest of the clues and the theme altogether. Apart from those four, it was all pretty clear, so thanks Ifor. I seem to remember the theme's having been used before, but the pleasure was not diminished by that. The only snag is that with time left over I'm having to ask myself whether to go back to that unfinished numerical....
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.After the infernal (and abandoned) numerical I was hoping for an easier ride this week. Wrong! Very tough indeed. While I'd agree that the construction was very clever to be brutally honest I found that it became more of a grind than a pleasure by the end. As for the author, that was just a lucky hit on Google as they are about as obscure as it gets (to me anyway). If it wasn't for Quinapalus and Bradford I think I'd still be working on this at Christmas.
I'm in agreement with the previous comments. I believe that setters of numericals are told to keep it simple enough that nothing higher than a GCSE is required in maths. Would a GCSE in Eng. Lit. enable a solver to find this theme?
How can the penny drop on some thing so obscure.
Tea (&sympathy) is a solving and setting aid which you must purchase. There is a better (free) one called Quinapalus available on line.
How can the penny drop on some thing so obscure.
Tea (&sympathy) is a solving and setting aid which you must purchase. There is a better (free) one called Quinapalus available on line.
Finished, but very little pleasure. Just a grind from beginning to end, with no sequence of PDMs to keep one going. Working out what to do really had no internal logic to it, until you had completed, with not even a wittily subtle hint in the preamble. Even the preamble itself is, IMHO, incorrect. Bleurgh
Z cup, Philoctetes! You'll kick yourself when you realize how wrong one of your comments is, I should perhaps say two - to say more would give too much away but I hope you'll read the solution notes on the Times website in three weeks' time or the LWO blogs. Words are never wasted in the preambles.
Yes, indeed, Contendo, this week's Speccie was quite special.
Yes, indeed, Contendo, this week's Speccie was quite special.
Late due to constraints of marking examination papers and, of course, the difficulty of the puzzle!
I didn't really like this one either. Some (often) moan about the numericals; well, as a number cruncher myself, I feel I'm quite entitled to have a dig at the (to me) total obscurity of the author in this puzzle. Sorry, English buffs, but not for me at all. I'll stick to Agatha Christie ...
I didn't really like this one either. Some (often) moan about the numericals; well, as a number cruncher myself, I feel I'm quite entitled to have a dig at the (to me) total obscurity of the author in this puzzle. Sorry, English buffs, but not for me at all. I'll stick to Agatha Christie ...
Perhaps it would have been more satisfactory to have used the extra words in the down clues to identify the appropriate number of appropriate items more accurately in accordance with the work itself? Judging by quite a few comments here, this would have still been no give-away but at least would have been another link to the source. But, hey, it was still a most impressive construction, and my thanks still firmly go to Ifor.
Here I am at the tail-end once again, but only because the last few answers/entries have required much head-scratching. I was beginning to think that I'd just have to put in the obvious entry for 5ac without having parsed the clue (always unsatisfactory) until I finally worked it out: but surely it bends, if not actually breaks, a standard convention?
I'm surprised to find myself in a minority for having known the author's name as soon as the theme emerged, so the PDMs all happened at the start. How absurd!
I'm surprised to find myself in a minority for having known the author's name as soon as the theme emerged, so the PDMs all happened at the start. How absurd!