ACROSS LITE PUZZLE: [ CONNECTING FLIGHTS]
PROGRAM: [Across Lite]
PROGRAM: [Java]
PRINTOUT PUZZLE: [ CONNECTING FLIGHTS]
PROGRAM: [Adobe Acrobat]
There was a time, not too long ago, where I was dragged, kicking and screaming, rock climbing with my friend Peter. It sounds like the makings of a bad Hollywood “buddy comedy.” Peter’s a burly outdoorsy type whose idea of a great vacation is hiking across glaciers, miles away from civilization, contemplating nature and his existence in it, all the while carrying his provisions for the week. I’m a city-slicker who needs his Starbucks and Times crossword every morning and will act like a prima donna without them. And if I have to travel somewhere to get those things, I’d prefer it be over pavement, thank you. Peter gets up at the crack of dawn. At the time we were rock climbing I was a night owl, and, occasionally, would be dragged to some climbs nursing a major hangover. Peter used to be a teacher. His calm, careful and methodical approach to the climbs always gave me the sense of confidence that I could do all the routes and that solutions would present themselves. I am not calm, ever, and generally can and will freak out whilst in the middle of difficult situations.
Though it sounds like I’m complaining about it, rock climbing was a blast. Especially from a puzzler’s standpoint. Each unfortunately-named route was given a level of difficulty based on the single-hardest move to the top. (I say “unfortunately-named” because it seemed like all routes were all named after some drug/hippie bullshit like “Joint Distribution,” “The Bone,” The Snort” and “Overdose.” How high were you guys when you named them?) There were times when I’d get to that difficult move, possibly a good couple feet off the ground, definitely held up with Peter’s jury-rigged belaying, and I’d just freeze.
“How the hell am I supposed to get over there when I’m stuck on the rock here?”
This happens nearly all the time while making crosswords. I have since lost track of the numbers of times I have struggled, grappled, rejiggered, stuggled some more, re-grappled, scrapped everything, re-re-grappled, and finally burst through the “impossible” corner of an interlocking mass of chunky long entries only to look on in horror at the symmetrically opposed, no-less-equally-daunting corresponding corner.
“How the hell am I supposed to do that after just doing this corner?”
We don’t rock climb any more. But I would, if asked again. Peter has since secured his dream job as contributing editor to a major dictionary. And maybe when that infamous “Brendan Emmett Quigley’s All-Time, Bigger, Better, Faster, Stronger, More American, All-Killer No Filler” anthology of strictly my tour de force work comes out, I can ask somebody like him to reflect on the work. Write liner notes, perhaps. Maybe he could even title some of the trickier corners things like “Bongtacular” or “Dimebag Paranoia Wordapalooza Surprise.”
In an alternate universe, I’d be a lexicographer like your friend Peter. I have several Facebook friends who are lexicographers and I think this makes me cool.
Brendan, you’ve finally done it: You’ve found an ARLO who isn’t someone whose heyday was 35 years ago and isn’t a square comic strip character.
This reminds me of when I loaded trucks for a paper company as an undergrad. The paper colors were things like “lift-off lemon”, “planetary purple” and “fireball fuchsia”. I always imagined a bunch of people sitting in a room doing lines of coke and coming up with color names.
Loved 20A fyi. Once I got that everything fell into place.
Cool theme. I couldn’t solve the whole puzzle, since I was locked into NORTHWESTDELTA and FANGED and messed up a bunch up top (never heard of PATEN, had ATONAL for AERIAL, had NIL for PEP, etc.).
Is GRIG really a baby eel? I looked it up in two places and got different meanings.
Love the new clue for ARLO!
I think Alaska is technically part of the CONTINENTALUS