Monday, 1/31/11

NYT 1:16 ... LAT 1:21 ... CS 2:05 ... ND 1:12 ... JON 2:00 ... BEQ 3:32

Sunday, 1/30/11

NYT (p) 12:30* ... LAT 5:12 ... MR (p) 5:58 ... BG (p) 5:45 ... ND 3:10 ... CS 1:51 ... WP (p) 5:08 ... Acrostic 2:50 (!)

*I had no idea about square 10, so I guessed a different bird beginning with the same letter. Across Lite would have accepted it!

The acrostic is probably my favorite of all time, and surely the first where I've actually read the book. (Well, only the first few chapters so far -- I want to make it last. You know, like Puzzle Masterpieces, which I may never finish.)

Saturday, 1/29/11

NYT (p) 4:28 ... LAT (p) 3:18 ... CS (p) 2:33 ... ND (p) 5:17 ... Hex Cryptic (p) 10:25

Heckuva MGWCC yesterday (which I solved today)... even after getting the theme, it was still crazy hard, especially the SW corner.

Friday, 1/28/11

NYT (p) 5:41 ... LAT (p) 3:27 ... CS (p) 2:41 ... ND (p) 2:45 ... CHE (p) 3:51 ... WSJ (p) 6:23 ... MGWC (p) 16:35

Thursday, 1/27/11

NYT 1:55 ... LAT 2:12 ... CS 1:28 ... ND 1:47 ... BEQ 2:34 ... FB 5:11 ... TPP Squeezeboxes (p) 6:00 ... AR #12 (p) 13:30

I'm pretty sure I test-solved PB's NYT puzzle for him last year, because I had a weird feeling of deja vu while solving. So I won't count it as my fastest Thursday.

Wednesday, 1/26/11

NYT 1:59 ... LAT 1:54 ... CS 2:26 ... ND 1:22

Tuesday, 1/25/11

NYT 2:09 ... LAT 1:39 ... CS 2:09 ... ND 1:35 ... BT 2:18 ... TO 2:22 ... FB 5:22

Monday, 1/24/11

NYT (p) 1:48 ... LAT (p) 2:02 ... CS (p) 2:33 ... ND (p) 2:02 ... JON 1:54 ... BEQ (p) 4:37

Paper again, aiming for under two minutes on the three easy puzzles. Just missed on the first two, but got into the right groove on the NYT and lowered my record by one second.

I won't be using paper every day, just got on a little kick there... Probably will print Fri/Sat/Sun most weeks until the ACPT.

Sunday, 1/23/11

NYT (p) 7:18 ... LAT (p) 7:40 ... MR (p) 7:30 [plus 1:15 for meta] ... BG (p) 9:35 ... ND (p) 5:02 ... CS (p) 3:42 ... WP (p) 4:15 ... Cryptic 5:50 ... AR #10 (p) 30:00+ and a google ... AR #11 (p) 16:30

Saturday, 1/22/11

NYT (p) 4:23 ... LAT (p) 3:52 ... CS (p) 2:07 ... ND (p) 7:33 ... First Things First (p) 7:15

Catching up with the ACPT

You may know that I like to collect crossword books. Nowadays, Peter Gordon's Puzzlewright Press is pretty much the only game in town, publishing outstanding new collections by Berry, Longo, Quigley, et al., as well as reprints of LA Times and CrosSynergy puzzles. And the Simon & Schuster series provides many, many hours of solid (if usually unexciting) entertainment. But to make up for years of lost time, I go looking on Amazon.com for out-of-print volumes, which is how I found gems like this collection of GAMES Magazine puzzles and this Henry Hook extravaganza.


The Holy Grail of my search was Will Shortz's Tournament Crosswords, Volume 2. It was published in 2005, but not a single copy has been available from a reseller since I added it to my Wish List two years ago. Volume 1 was available, but cost more than $50, so I held off.

Fast forward to two weeks ago, when all of a sudden I saw a copy of Volume 2 for sale. (No thanks to Amazon, whose "Sign up to be notified when this item becomes available" feature clearly doesn't work.) And it was only $10 including shipping! So I bit the bullet and bought both volumes, which arrived in the mail last week.

Now I can play along with every ACPT from 1990-2004, and pretend that I would have taken some championships away from Delfin and Hoylman if I'd been competing back then. (Of course, solving pressure-free on my kitchen table is a little different from the Stamford ballroom, not to mention the lack of a whiteboard for the final.) Both books provide a "percentile" guide with the answers, showing how many competitors finished in 3 minutes, 4 minutes, etc. And starting with 1996, the tournament website has the detailed stats for comparison.

For instance, my performance at the 1998 ACPT "would have been" nine minutes faster than winner Trip Payne (with the asterisk that I was already familiar with the crazy Puzzle 5 gimmick thanks to BEQ having blogged about it). More important than the ego boost: just like with the SAT, there's no better way to train for the ACPT than with actual practice tests. What I'm saying is, I'm really going to be unbeatable this year. Kidding!

(I can't find this in my archives, though I thought I'd mentioned it once -- there's an earlier volume of tournament puzzles, American Championship Crosswords, which I bought years ago and used to train for the 2009 tournament. That one covers 1978-1989, but only includes 75 selected puzzles from those first 12 tourneys. On the positive side, unlike the latter two books, it's got a detailed points breakdown for scoring and comparison.)

Some notes about tournaments past, for those like me who weren't there:
  • Of course, Maura Jacobson constructed each Puzzle #6. Merl Reagle is also represented every year, covering every other puzzle from #1 to #8. I wish Henry Hook would come back, not least because I'm often on his wavelength in the Boston Globe. (Peter Gordon too, but that's probably less likely...)
  • The style in the early '90s is slightly jarring, though I've solved enough old crosswords to be used to it. I was most surprised to see a couple "cryptic" clues that don't involve any kind of definition -- something like [Time's up?] for EMIT. I wasn't surprised by the occasional "numeral-for-letter" convention where I's and O's can do double duty.
  • Similarly, while I've seen some great gimmicks already in the four sets of puzzles I've done, there were also some boring themes back in the day. 1991 alone has a quip in the 21x21 and two "free association" themes where the long answers all have to do with an arbitrary word (American Red CROSS founder; Christopher CROSS song; "CROSS of God" orator; you get the idea).
  • The craziest theme is 2002's Puzzle 5 by Cox & Rathvon: a short story containing each fill word represented by its clue! (We were standing near the 14D in the bow of my 47A, the "62D," ...) I haven't done that one yet, but I can already imagine how discombobulating it will be to speed-solve.
  • I hadn't realized that Merl's self-professed favorite puzzle, "Gridlock", was from the 1990 ACPT. I think I've solved it before, but it still took me almost 10 minutes.
  • 1992's final puzzle by Eric Albert was entitled "Wow!" and billed as the first computer-generated crossword in tournament history. (Albert, as you may know, was the first real innovator in grid-filling software.) The 62-worder (in the shape of Manny Nosowsky's last puzzle) is just fine, but of course lacks any cool seed entries, and probably wouldn't pass muster in today's NYT.

Friday, 1/21/11

NYT (p) 4:17 ... LAT (p) 2:48 ... CS (p) 2:26 ... ND (p) 2:23 ... CS (p) 4:03 ... WSJ (p) 6:10 ... BEQ/WN 1:59 ... MGWC 3:57

Thursday, 1/20/11

NYT 2:19 ... LAT 1:56 ... CS 2:27 ... ND 1:47 ... BEQ 3:37 ... FB 5:31

I wrote up most of my big post today but ran out of time. Tomorrow for sure! This won't be like my ACPT wrapup, I swear!

Wednesday, 1/19/11

NYT (p) 2:48 ... LAT (p) 2:25 ... CS (p) 2:20 ... ND (p) 2:16

Check back in the afternoon for my promised post about cool crossword books...

Sorry, let's say tomorrow -- I have actual work to do today!

Tuesday, 1/18/11

NYT 1:49 ... LAT 1:20 ... CS 1:46 ... ND 1:17 ... BT 2:16 ... TO 1:53

Monday, 1/17/11

NYT (p) 2:10 ... LAT (p) 2:06 ... CS (p) 2:25 ... ND (p) 2:01 ... JON 2:31 ... BEQ (p) 3:26

Sunday, 1/16/11

NYT (p) 7:00 ... LAT (p) 6:22 ... MR (p) 6:21 ... BG (p) 5:19 ... ND (p) 5:13 ... CS (p) 2:48 ... WP (p) 4:40 ... Acrostic 12:30

Asterisk on the Reagle because I realized a little way in that I'd solved it before (maybe a month ago). At least some clues were new!

And congrats Joon on the NYT -- I was perhaps looking for more bleeding-edge entries in the long fill, as I've come to expect from you young-turk freestylers, but I'm totally satisfied with rock-solid fill and fresh cluing. Actually, looking at it again, those four vertical 8s are quite nice.

And and, my much-anticipated Amazon purchases arrived in the mail, but I'll elaborate in a day or two when I have time.

Saturday, 1/15/11

NYT 7:51 ... LAT 2:43 ... CS 2:17 ... ND 4:38 ... Acrostic 9:35

Friday, 1/14/11

NYT (p) 4:45 ... LAT (p) 2:57 ... CS (p) 2:39 ... ND (p) 2:42 ... CHE (p) 3:08 ... WSJ (p) 6:32 ... MGWC 2:25

Thursday, 1/13/11

NYT 2:07 ... LAT 2:43 ... CS 2:07 ... ND 1:44 ... BEQ 3:14

Wednesday, 1/12/11

NYT (p) 2:53 ... LAT (p) 2:44 ... CS (p) 2:34 ... ND (p) 2:07

Tuesday, 1/11/11

NYT 1:53 ... LAT 1:59 ... CS 1:48 ... ND 1:22 ... BT 2:54 ... TO 2:46

Monday, 1/10/11

NYT 1:37 ... LAT 1:33 ... CS 1:34 ... ND 1:24 ... JON 2:23 ... BEQ 4:47 ... BEQ/GB 3:13

Sunday, 1/9/11

NYT 5:21 ... LAT 5:06 ... MR 4:11 ... BG 4:53 ... ND 3:31 ... LATB 4:08 ... CS 2:15 ... WP 6:11 ... Diagramless (p) 9:25

RIP Sylvia Bursztyn. I guess today is her last puzzle in the Sunday LAT. I've really enjoyed her fresh, wide-open grids for the last couple years, and will have to investigate her older work with the late Barry Tunick.

While I'm writing, here's what I've been up to... Solving plenty of crosswords, natch. Had some success with the brain-busters in Ultrahard Crosswords. (There are three actually ultra-hard puzzles in each volume of 50; I've been able to finish four of the 15 in my omnibus and made large dents in three others.) Found a source for Cox & Rathvon's weekly cryptic in Canada's National Post. Nearly finished with their two published collections of these medium-level puzzles, so I was thrilled to discover there's a way to print out the new ones every week. And started attempting the Guardian's cryptics, my first foray into the UK style - got a lot to learn about their abbrevs!

And finally, I just made a couple of exciting purchases on the Amazon Marketplace, but I'll save the glee until the books actually arrive, because you never know.

Saturday, 1/8/11

NYT 5:14 ... LAT 3:10 ... CS 1:34 ... ND 4:33 ... Snowflake (p) 9:00

Friday, 1/7/11

NYT 2:55 ... LAT 2:24 ... CS 1:54 ... ND 1:53 ... CHE 2:38 ... WSJ 4:02 ... MGWC 2:20

Thursday, 1/6/11

NYT 2:57 ... LAT 2:08 ... CS 1:53 ... ND 1:41 ... BEQ 2:55

Wednesday, 1/5/11

NYT 1:58 ... LAT 1:48 ... CS 2:33 ... ND 1:36 ... AR #9 (p) 21:40

Tuesday, 1/4/11

NYT 1:36 ... LAT 1:38 ... CS 1:35 ... ND 1:27 ... BT 2:46 ... TO 3:26

Monday, 1/3/11

NYT 1:35 ... LAT 1:23 ... CS 1:35 ... ND 1:21 ... JON 3:11 ... BEQ 2:47

Sunday, 1/2/11

NYT (p) 7:02 ... LAT 4:41 ... MR 3:28 ... BG 6:04 ... ND 3:31 ... CS 2:30 ... WP 2:53 ... Acrostic 6:53

Saturday, 1/1/11

NYT (p) 6:56 ... LAT (p) 4:05 ... CS (p) 2:25 ... ND (p) 7:25