Today’s Newsday Saturday Stumper, by Matthew Sewell, is exceedingly difficult. But I got it, after at least an hour’s worth of staring. I started with 30-A, three letters, “Joey of fiction” and 31-D, four letters, “Publisher of Firestarter excerpts (1980)” and began to fill in the puzzle’s eastern edge. Toughest section: the southwest, where I was long in a 52-A, fifteen letters, “Precarious position.”
Some clue-and-answer pairs of note:
3-A, eight letters, “In high gear.” Groan.
5-D, ten letters, “Possible peppers partner.” But the answer need not begin with P.
8-D, four letters, “Resa alternative.” I thought this clue might be about wines I’ve never heard of. No.
14-D, five letters, “Slide stuff.” Very out of the way.
17-D, five letters, “Pit of the stomach.” Clever clueing.
19-A, seven letters, “Mideast word for ‘lighthouse.’” I guessed right and learned something.
21-D, seven letters, “With added zest.” An adverb won’t help.
23-A, thirteen letters, “Where Pulitzer’s Big Apple office was.” My first (wild) guess: MADISONSQUARE.
25-D, ten letters, “Pet kept for pest control.” I wanted BODEGACAT.
38-D, three letters, “Desserted?” Kinda awkward.
39-A, thirteen letters, “Tonic cocktails.” Eww.
47-D, four letters, “Big shock.” Talk about misdirection.
58-A, four letters, “Moviedom’s ‘Eighth Wonder.’” This answer helped a lot on the way to filling in the southwest.
My favorite clue in today’s puzzle: 1-A, four letters, “Receptionist’s pronoun.”
No spoilers; the answers are in the comments.
Saturday, November 11, 2023
Today’s Saturday Stumper
By Michael Leddy at 9:11 AM
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comments: 5
ROO. OMNI. BRINKOFDISASTER. ONSTILTS.
HOTSAUSAGE. TERI. STAIN. INNIE. MINARET. CITRUSY.
WORLDBUILDING. (Here it is, or was.) RATTERRIER.
ATELAST. ESPRESSOTINIS. AFRO. KONG. WHOM.
Very tough puzzle indeed. I'm surprised they didn't go with a more traditional clue for "world building" ... maybe tie it into a movie franchise.
I’ve never heard that term (though over years of telling stories to my children, I definitely did some world building). Now I can see that the clue about Pulitzer looks pretty far afield.
I finished but was flummoxed by 53D and 55A--guessed a letter, and it was "correct" but left me no wiser.
Stumped on 11/04...Guess I should just give up....
I was baffled by DAN (martial arts) but I knew ORAN — from Camus, The Plague, way back in high school.
Keep pitching! I missed last week’s. This week’s too was really tough.
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