Monday, April 29, 2013

Cookie Monster (Solution No. 3,281)

Boy this was a doozy.  I didn't get 14d Thursday, and it cackled and taunted at me from the page all afternoon and all night.  Once I got the answer, I had an idea of how it parsed out, but you really have to sit down and count "nom"s to understand it, and then, it's elegant in how entirely by the rules it is.

Some will complain about the difficulty, but it's the best straight cryptic I've solved this year.

Solution and annotation below the fold. 



Legend: "*" anagram; "~" sounds like; "<" letters reversed; "( )" letters inserted; "_" or lower case: letters deleted; "†" explicit in the clue, “^” selected letter or letters, “{“ relocated letter or letters, "¶" letter bank, "§" heteronym


Across
1a
BROKEN *HEART
Twist: inverted clue
Here the indicator (“broken”) is in the answer rather than the clue.  *EARTH is the anagram of “heart” and “grief” is the definition
8a
PO(LYE)STER
POSTER (“placard”) containing (“includes”) LYE (“caustic”)
9a
C | APRI_
C (“cold”) + APRI_l_ (“month,” omission of last letter indicated by “endless”)
10a
<_TO YS_<
<noiSY OTters<
11a
UN(*INSPI)RED
Twist: coinage
*SPIN I (anagram indicated by “livened up”) contained in (“inside”) UN-RED (coinage: “probably voting Democratic”)
13a
EM(PLOY)_EES
EMcEES (“hosts”) replacing (†) C (“100”) with PLOY (“ruse”)
These make particularly easy clues to create since there are so many ways to do a replacement, but they’re uncommon
15a
AND | RE
AND (“also”) + RE (“note”)
André Breton (1896-1966) was a French poet and founder of surrealism.
16a
*ARCED
*CEDAR (anagram indicated by “shaped”)
Elegant to fit a type of wood here, but the traditional wood for crafting archers’ bows is yew, while string players’ bows are traditionally made out of a Brazilian wood called pernambuco.  Sabers, like most young musicians, has a fiberglass bow though.
18a
*TIDAL (W)AVE
*VALIDATE (anagram indicated by “corrupt”) with W (“ex-president”) contained (within”)
How many The Nation readers were looking to anagram Nixon or Bush?
20a
THE O | RI(O)LES
THEO (“Van Gogh”) + RILES (“gets angry”) containing (“about”) ^O^rioles (first letter indicated by “leader”)
22a
~BRED
~BREAD (“money,” homonym indicated by “on the radio”)
24a
O | CHER
^O^range (first letter indicated by “bit of ”) + CHER (“singer/actress”)
25a
_EXT | *IRPATE
_n_EXT (“nearest,” omission of first letter indicated by “headless”) + *PIRATE (anagram indicated by “crazy”)
26a
*VEGETARIANS
Twist: cross-reference
*SAVING A TREE (anagram indicated by “recycled”)




Down
1d
BELL | Y UP
BELL (“what might save you”) + YUP (“you betcha”)
Younger solvers probably haven’t watched many boxing matches: being “saved by the bell” is when the bell ending a round sounds while a fighter is being counted out.  Depending on the particular set of rules in use, the count may be halted (in which case the fighter is not knocked out) or continued after the bell.
2d
OP-E}D}
}D}OPE (“idiot,” relocation of first letter indicated by “burying the lead”)
Twist: an unusual relocation clue
3d
EL | TON
EL (“the Spanish”) + TON (“heavyweight”)
I was trying to fit “LOO” or “CAN” into this one
4d
<HAR< *D-NOSED
<RAH< (“cheer,” reversal indicated by “up”) + *SODDEN (anagram indicated by “drunk”)
5d
*AC(C)EP | TABLE
*PACE (anagram indicated by “wildly”) containing (“around”) ^C^ARD (first letter indicated by “front”) + TABLE (†)
6d
TAPE}RED}
}RED} TAPE (bureaucracy, relocation indicated by “had the last word on top”)
Twist: relocating a word rather than a letter
7d
FIDDLEDEEDEE
¶FILED (letter bank indicated by “multiple times”)
Twist: letter bank (a Hot and Trazom favorite)
8d
PUT | REF | ACTION
PUT (“deposit”) + REF ACTION (“blowing a whistle, say”)
This is one of those definitions by example that Hot and Trazom were commenting on in Word Salad this week.
12d
<WON | DER | DR_UG<
<GU_a_RD (“keep an eye on,”) + RED (“rosy”) + NOW< (“present day”), reversal of the whole thing indicated by “raise,” omission of A indicated by “lacking a”
Something of a twist here too since the omission indicator is outside the reversal indicator.  If you tried to feed this kind of code to a computer you’d get a syntax error, but puzzles are meant to be solved by humans, not computers.
14d
EAT | NO M | EAT
This one’s the centerpiece: twisted even when the wordplay is entirely by the book.
§EAT (“go nom nom nom”) + NOM (†) + EAT (“go nom nom nom”)
Remember, “ignore punctuation, which is designed to confuse!” 
17d
~CHEKHOV
~CHECK OFF (“mark box on a list”), homophone indicated by “for audience”
Are homophones of Russian or Arabic names and other words that have to be transliterated fair?
19d
AIR MASS
AIR (“a tune”) + MASS (“a liturgy”)
21d
_ENTER
_c_enter (“football player,” omission of first letter indicated by “starts late”)
23d
ORC | A
ORC (“Middle Earth [scene of The Hobbit] monster”) + A (†)

2 comments:

  1. Not sure I agree with your take on 14D.

    How is "eat" more precisely defined as "go nom nom nom" than it is by "go nom nom nom nom nom"?

    You might argue that as long as the first phrase contains one more "nom" than the second, the clue's legitimacy remains in tact, and I have no beef there, but . . .

    This sol requires a forced interpretation (of the phrase) that is only justified once the entry is ascertained -- and then only tenuously.

    There would have been better ways to do this, IMHO. I got it, btw, but I don't believe I've ever regarded a clue with as hairy an eyeball as I did this one!

    Mike K.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I thought that one was so clever that I readily forgave the slang.

    ReplyDelete

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