

It would have been great to have the entire puzzle equally smooth, without that one section sticking out. The rest of the puzzle has fairly minor stuff (aside from LEAL, also straight from the Maleska era), things like ENUF, EUR, NIE, ETYM, spread out through the puzzle to be fairly unnoticeable. (Can't say I like Jim's original grid any better, given I believe it would have AT YA at 70D crossing/duping LOVE YOU, and OODLE doesn't feel crossworthy even to this tech dork.) I would have either liked 1.) more work in that section by changing the curious but not interesting (to me) TETRAGRAM to something else, as there's a lot of flexibility there in the ?ET?R? pattern, or 2.) splitting up TETRAGRAM at the A and reworking. The first is minor, the second straight from the Weng/Maleska eras, and the third not only cluable in one way,, but bringing up bad memories for many.

There were some bits I hitched on though, notably the area containing OPP and PROEMS and CONG. The lower word count allows longer fill like MAIL ORDER and NETIZENS crossing, as well as the cool DIAL A RIDE and regal WHITE GLOVES. It's audacious to attempt the difficult task of dropping down to 138 words, and to pull it off with not much glue is impressive. Jim did very well with his fill, well above par for Sunday debuts.

I especially liked the JI in KANJI and JEE in DARJEELING. And to have each of the G sounds be spelled differently was really well done. OH DARLING felt strained to me, like it was contrived to make a length for symmetry requirements, but six out of seven is quite good. The themers also had nice base phrases, from WEIRD AL to KNEE JERK REACTION to CON ARTIST. KANJI ARTIST felt a bit too much like a real thing, but the rest of the themers felt above average to strong on the humor scale KITTY LITURGY not a ten only because of missed LOLcat potential. Another funny moment came when I got to GPS I LOVE YOU, and another with GENIE JERK REACTION. Next themer up was OH DARJEELING, which made me laugh with its hilarious visual of a guy batting his eyelashes at looseleaf tea (I read between the lines of the clue). Given that I didn't actually uncover a themer all the way until I got to BEE GEE LINE, I prepped for the worst.īut wow, was I pleasantly surprised. Reading a title like "WELL, GOLLY," my mind immediately went to Ian's very recent puzzle and continued with 1.) it must be an add-a-sound puzzle with "GEE" likely involved 2.) I really hope it's something more complex than just adding the G sound. Sometimes a puzzle surprises me, and that's a very welcome occurrence after ten years of solving. Will's Sunday supply is comparatively low, creating opportunities for us Sunday-hopefuls. I submitted this puzzle at the end of September, a mere 11 weeks ago! That's light-speed in the crosswording world. But I do like Will and Joel's clues for DRAGNET and AWOL. I wish my clue for OH DARJEELING had gotten through, but I understand why it had to go. Most of my clues were changed a little bit or completely (64%), but I'll proudly claim the clues for NANU, NACL, TOENAIL, and STOOP. No amount of fiddling with the grid produced any better result. Will's entry is definitely livelier, but it comes with PENTAD and PROEMS where I had CELLAR and DREAMS. One interesting change: GOD NO was originally OODLE. I wanted each GEE sound to be spelled differently, and I wanted them spread out within their respective entries two are at the beginning, two at the end, and three in the middle. Will and Joel said that Add-A-Sound themes were becoming common, so what put this puzzle over the top were a couple of secondary goals that I set. So, thank you, Amy, for helping me make a better product! I figured I'd have enough for a Sunday, which has been a goal since I started constructing. That allowed me to get GPS I LOVE YOU and OH DARJEELING, two of my favorites, along with KITTY LITURGY and WEIRD ALGAE. I abandoned OUIJA and started thinking of other possibilities. I decided to push forward and make a weekday-sized puzzle with it, until at the last minute, Amy Reynaldo hammered it into my head. I asked my fellow cruciverbalists and got mixed results. But not everyone pronounces it WEE-JEE, so it might fail for some. I immediately fell in love with the phrase NINTENDO OUIJA. The idea for this puzzle came from out of the blue, as long as you define "out of the blue" as " Ian Livengood's 'Chee Whiz!' puzzle of 8/3/14." While solving that puzzle, adding CHEE sounds to different phrases, I thought, "Gee, wouldn't it be interesting to add a GEE sound to different phrases?" Where do I come up with this stuff?!
