Puzzle Solution #22: What did Delaware?
The ceremonial opening
I’m always tempted to steal a line from Click and Clack, the Tappet Brothers, when I post my puzzle solutions: You’ve wasted another perfectly good 15 minutes half-hour what seems like a week solving another of my not-ready-for-prime-time puzzles. I probably have used that before, in fact. No matter, I’ve used themes similar to the one used in this crossword before too. I am nothing if not consistent.
First, in the guise of a random musical interlude, a small measure of spoiler space. Before scrolling past it, please treat yourself to Northern Dialect, that episode of the Wait Wait podcast will in fact wait.
The solution
This is certainly one of my tougher puzzles. Friends who are familiar with the crosswords of the New York Times have called it Wednesday-Thursdayish. I deliberately clued it with this later-week difficulty in mind—this grid seemed to fit—and then questioned its suitability for my casual-solver audience.
Also, by the time I got around to publishing it I had grown disenamored with its punning theme entries. But just this morning I received an email from a friend:
Perhaps your best puzzle yet. Reminds me of the geographic puns of my childhood. (“What did Delaware? She wore her New Jer-zee”).
Not everyone hated the puns! (My friend lived his childhood in the early 1940s, during a less jaded time pun-wise.)
The howler
I almost always commit one boo-boo and this puzzle’s was a doozy. In the earliest copies of the crossword, the clue for 47-across’s FOLLY identified Secretary of State William Seward’s president as James Buchanan. His president was Andrew Johnson. Since this clue was the revealer (“Seward’s Folly” pointing to Alaska), the mistake was a big one. It was quickly corrected—thanks to the sharp eye of solver George B—but a few saw it.
DATE | TITLE |
04/24/2020 | #k1: Meadow’s First! |
04/20/2020 | #24: Roadside Attractions? |
02/20/2020 | #23: World’s Smallest! |
06/20/2018 | #22: Northern Dialect |
01/30/2018 | #21: Special Editions |
10/10/2017 | #20: Saints We’d Like to See |