Constructor: Brendan Emmett Quigley
Relative difficulty: Medium to Medium-Challenging, depending on how well you know the work of John Le Carré (untimed)
THEME: none
Word of the Day: Bathymetry (42D: Bathymetry measurements => DEPTHS) —
Normally don't care for the highly-sequestered corners type of construction, but it turns out these corners were pretty easy to get into and so didn't feel like four separate puzzles, the way they can when the entry point from other parts of the grid is exceeding narrow (say, one square wide). This one kept its feeling of flow from section to section, which I like and appreciate. The NE looks like it would be the hardest to get into from the center, since you'd just have a few not very telling letters at the back ends of those long Downs to help you, but today, BARBECUE and ETAILERS were easy to pick up even with very little help from the crosses, so I just zoomed right up into that corner (although, as you can see, I "mis"spelled BARBEQUE at first pass—please note that my software is currently accepting the "wrong" spelling and redlining the "correct" spelling of this word (11D: Occasion for smoking). If I hadn't had to give into QED, no way I put a "Q" there) (30A: Letters for a proof reader) (because QED, short for quod erat demonstrandum, are letters you might see at the end of a mathematical proof). The toughest part for me was actually the entire middle of the grid. Had to work for all four of those marquee 12-letter answers that cross each other around that center black square. Frustrating. Here's a shot of the grid from the moment of peak frustration:
Five more things:
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Relative difficulty: Medium to Medium-Challenging, depending on how well you know the work of John Le Carré (untimed)
Word of the Day: Bathymetry (42D: Bathymetry measurements => DEPTHS) —
Bathymetry (/bəˈθɪmətriː/) is the study of underwater depth of ocean floors or lake floors. In other words, bathymetry is the underwater equivalent to hypsometry or topography. The name comes from Greekβαθύς (bathus), "deep", and μέτρον (metron), "measure".Bathymetric (or hydrographic) charts are typically produced to support safety of surface or sub-surface navigation, and usually show seafloor relief or terrain as contour lines (called depth contours or isobaths) and selected depths (soundings), and typically also provide surface navigational information. Bathymetric maps (a more general term where navigational safety is not a concern) may also use a Digital Terrain Modeland artificial illumination techniques to illustrate the depths being portrayed. The global bathymetry is sometimes combined with topography data to yield a Global Relief Model. Paleobathymetry is the study of past underwater depths. (wikipedia)
• • •
Felt pretty confident heading out of that NW corner, which was no trouble at all—put down MESAS (4D: Features of Hopi lands in Arizona) and then educatedly guessed GOYAS (19A: The "Black Paintings" and others), which was correct and got me IN SYNC, etc. But after that, yeesh, even getting the full front ends of those long Downs didn't help. MURDER HORNET is what happens when you make a puzzle at the peak of what turns out to be a very short-lived media phenomenon (7D: Informal name for Vespa mandarinia). Historians will be able to date the creation of this puzzle to summer 2020, is what I'm saying. I haven't thought about the MURDER HORNET since that week earlier this year when everyone (on social media) was guffawing in that "2020, amirite?" kind of way about this insect. So far had the hornet receded into my memory, that even having MURDER in place did nothing for me. The absurd Latin (I assume) taxonomical clue did nothing either. To me a Vespa is a motorbike. And GEORGE SM- ... honestly, the clue suggested totally different genres / hero types to me (21D: Long-running fictional hero who made his debut in "Call for the Dead"). I was thinking some kind of franchise-anchoring "hero," but it's just ... a spy who was in a lot of novels. This is all to say that I know very well who GEORGE SMILEY is and still did not suspect he was the answer here (at least not immediately) even when I had GEORGE SM- in place. Further, as you can see above, I had TONTO instead of TANTO (I assumed that they had found a non-Lone Ranger way to clue that word, finally). So TONTO blocked MOTHER NATURE for a bit. The other musical answer, QUARTER RESTS, I have heard of but couldn't get to from the info I had in the grid (36A: Squiggly musical symbols). So, in somewhat unexpected fashion, the puzzle was hard in the middle and easy in the corners. Weird.
Ultimately, I LIKED IT. It's very much a Saturday, and probably above average in terms of quality. Saturdays are almost always gonna feel like sloggier Fridays to me. I usually approach them with a "let's just get through this" attitude. When you put the premium on difficulty and not entertainment, the result is less enjoyable to me. Hence Friday > Saturday. But this one had more nice / original moments than most Saturdays. What's more, it had no real weak spots. Grid was solid and varied and interesting throughout.
Five more things:
- 5D: Dashes (off) (JETS)— wrote this in first, only ... I thought the answer was JOTS (like when you "dash (off)" a note?? Weird to have the totally wrong answer get me three correct letters including a "J"
- 6D: Start of some thoughts shared on social media (IMO) — wrote in IDK. I virtually never see IMO ... except in crosswords, obviously
- 50A: Dive (SWOOP) — off the SW-, wrote in SWOON. This left me with DENTHS for the [Bathymetry measurements]. I was very much prepared not to question it; figured it must be some horrible technical term I'd never heard of. Then I thought "no, it's *too* awful," and then I rethought the crosses and SWOOP presented itself
- 24D: Heebie-jeebies (JITTERS) — As you can see in the partially filled grid, above, I had JI- and still no idea this was JITTERS. To me, "heebie jeebies" is the creeps, whereas JITTERS are the shakes. The former comes more from fear of something threatening, ghostly, monstrous, Lovecraftian, the latter from, say, coffee, or anxiety / nervousness about something more quotidian. Shudder with fear, heebie-jeebies; shake with anxiety, JITTERS. That is how my brain taxonomizes this stuff, it seems.
- 39A: Tenor part in Donizetti's "Don Pasquale" (ERNESTO) — clue may as well have been [Some guy's name].
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