Thursday, August 21, 2025

Fortieth Time’s Still the Charm! Five limerical lines of literary lions; “Hoosier pick to win at Indy?” “Lilliput-put-put-put...” Endless & big-like versus ended & twig-like; “Lay on, Macduff, Lady MacBeth! Out damn SweE.T. Spot!”

 PUZZLERIA! SLICES: OVER 5πe2 SERVED

Schpuzzle of the Week:

Five limerical lines of literary lions

Drop a letter from the likely baptismal name of a literary icon.

Anagram the result to get the eventual surname of a 20th-Century poet.

Drop a letter and anagram this result to get the surname of a 20th-Century poet.

Drop a letter and anagram that result to get the first name of a 20th-Century novelist/playwright.

The three letters you removed, in order, spell a nickname of a 20th-Century novelist/playwright.

Who are these five literary lions?

Appetizer Menu

Cryptic Crosswords By The Two-Score Appetizer:

Fortieth Time’s Still the Charm!

Puzzleria! features this week another enjoyably excellent Cryptic Crossword Puzzle, this time with a “somewhat literary feel to it” – courtesy of our friend Patrick J. Berry (aka “cranberry,” his screen name). 

This is Patrick’s 40th Cryptic Crossword masterpiece that has graced the cyberpages of Puzzleria! This latest one deals with a theme that is the opposite of “drab,” orthographically as well as figuratively.

You can access any of Patrick’s previous 39 cryptic crosswords by opening the links below:

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15

16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 

28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 

For those who may be new to cryptic crossword puzzles, Patrick has compiled the following list of basic cryptic crossword puzzle instructions:

Regarding the Across and Down clues and their format:

The number, or numbers, that appear in parentheses at the end of each clue indicate how many letters are in the answer.

Multiple numbers in parentheses indicate how letters are distributed in multiple-word answers. 

For example, (5) simply indicates a five-letter word like “Globe,” (2,1,6) indicates a two-letter-
plus-one-letter-plus-six-letter answer like “in a pickle,” and (4-7) indicates a four-letter-and-seven-letter hyphenated answer like “star-crossed,” as in “lovers.”

For further insight about how to decipher these numbered cryptic clues, see Patrick’s “Cryptic Crossword Tutorial” in this link to his November 2017 cryptic crossword. 

That Tutorial appears below the filled-in answer-grid in that edition of Puzzleria!

And so, try to recall what you learned in your English classes, touch up on your classics, and display some measure of literary class. Mix, match, mash and clash wits with Patrick’s latest Cryptic Crossword!  

Enjoy!

ACROSS

7. Very many like being stuck in hole?(7)

8. Rush to entertain company? It’s a burden!(7)

10. Have fun, take in a show(6)

11. Some innocently playing games, in pictures(8)

12. 14 character, a success after first intermission?(4)

13. Pinch butt of 14 character?(4,6)

14. Writer to brandish weapon by the end?(11)

19. Chap dealt with being mistreated(10)

22. 14 character, one getting hit at a hockey game?(4)

23. I would turn pale and stop(8)

24. Rodent chewing through fancy carpet(6)

25. Worry about meat going bad, seeing label(7)

26. 14 character to return? Well, this is certainly a surprise!(7)














DOWN

1. Some cut quite short(7)

2. Hard to get through flying insects for such a huge creature?(8)

3. Former Communist leader left in disgrace(6)

4. Go on supporting socially conscious leaders, getting rush(8)

5. 14 character “simply has no son,” claims story(6)

6. Urged, say, to get information about party(5,2)

9. Performer to use profanity(almost)during
short set, sad to have “lost head”(6,5)

15. 14 character with awfully large family coming over?(4,4)

16. Barely left in extremely risqué quips(8)

17. Total car, initially puncturing tire(7)

18. Scrap cryptic clues about one who does not drink alcohol(7)

20. Excited chap had date(6)

21. Be up in time for discussion(6)

MENU:

Time & Space Hors d’Oeuvre:

Endless & big-like versus ended & twig-like

Take a word that means vastness and endlessness, both spatially and temporally. 

The first half is an anagram of a French word for “ended.”

The second half of this word can be rearranged to spell a synonym of “small.”

What are this word and its two unexpected anagrams? 

Chevy Nova Novella Slice:

“Lilliput-put-put-put...”

The last three letters of a novelist’s surname, followed by a reverse ordering of the remaining letters in the name, followed by the word “car” spell a kind of very compact vehicle. 

Who is the novelist?

What is the vehicle? 

Riffing Off Shortz And Pegg Entrees:

“Lay on, Macduff, Lady MacBeth! Out damn SweE.T. Spot!”

Will Shortz’s August 17th Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, from Ed Pegg Jr., who conducts mathpuzzle.com, reads:

Take the classic illustrated children’s book Sylvester and the Magic Pebble.

Rearrange its 26 letters to name a famous film director (first and last names) and a noted role on stage (in two words). 

What are these things?

Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Pegg Entrees read:

ENTREE #1

Replace an abbreviation in the name of a puzzle-maker with the word of which it is an abbreviation. 

Rearrange the letters of this newly unabbreviated name to spell either the three
missing words in the left side of the illustration or the two missing words on the right side.

Who is this puzzle-maker?

What are the five missing words?

Note: Entrees #2 through #7 are conundrums drummed-up/dreamt-up by our friend and riffmeister extraordinaire Nodd. 

ENTREE #2

Name a well-known children’s book from the 1950s, in two words totaling 12 letters. Change the seventh letter to a different vowel to spell the name of a noted role on stage. 

Now go back to the two-word book title. Remove a word for a female bird from the first word of the title and replace it with an “o”. Slightly rearrange the letters of the first word of the title to spell a man’s name. That name, followed by the second word of the book title, is the name of a creator and producer of popular television shows who also directed films released in 1952 and 1970.

What are the book and the stage role, and who is the creator/producer/director?

ENTREE #3

Name a book that is styled as a children’s book but features adult themes. It was first published in the 1940s and eventually sold an estimated 140 million copies. The title consists of three words totaling 15 letters. 

The second word of the title is also the second word of the title of a well-known children’s book, also published in the 1940s. That book was made into a film that came out in the 1990s.

The third word of the title of the first book is the surname of a deceased theatre director and producer who directed or produced 41 Broadway shows.

What are the two books, and who is the director/producer?

ENTREE #4

Name a classic children’s book in two words totaling 13 letters. Rearrange the letters to form:

(1) the surname of the author of a classic 19th
Century children’s novel also enjoyed by adults, and... 

(2) the title of a book of the Bible. What are the two books, and who is the author?

ENTREE #5

Name a classic children’s book of the early 20th Century in four words totaling 17 letters. The first word, with an “i” inserted, is the titular role in a musical that opened in the 1970s and
ran on Broadway for almost six years. 

The third word of the book title, with the last letter changed to an “r”, is the first name of a famous actress whose acting career spanned from the early 1930s to the late 1960s. The fourth word of the book title, minus the last letter, is the surname of a famous actor whose acting career spanned from the early 1920s until 1960. The actress and actor starred together in a 1946 film.

What are the book title and the musical, and who are the actress and actor?

ENTREE #6

Name a classic children’s book published in the 1940s, in two words totaling 13 letters. The
book later became a film and a stage production.

The second word of the book title is the first name of a famous film director. The first word of the title, with three letters replaced with a letter that is commonly used to signify a number, can be arranged to spell the director’s last name. What is the book, and who is the director?

ENTREE #7

Name a children’s book published in 1976 that eventually became a series of books and an animated television series, in two words
totaling 11 letters. Six of the letters can be arranged to spell the surname of a well-known film writer and director whose movies appeared in the 1990s and 2000s. 

Four of the letters can be arranged to spell the first name of the writer-director, which is also the name of the protagonist in a famous stage play from the 19th Century. (To spell both the first and last names of the writer-director, two letters from the book title are used twice, and three letters are left over.) The title of the stage play sounds like it might be for children, but it is not.

What are the book and the play, and who is the writer-director? 

ENTREE #8

“Women distance runners do not possess the ‘stamina’ and ‘guts’ that men are blessed with.” That is an example of an “___ _____’ ____” (3, 5 & 4 letters). 

Take the 12 letters in those three words and
combine them with a 9-letter synonym of “stamina” and a 7-letter synonym of “guts.” Rearrange these 28 letters to spell the title of a classic children’s book.

What are these two synonyms, three missing words, and children’s book title?

Hint: The classic children’s book is definitely not an example of the three missing words in the blanks. 

ENTREE #9

Write a caption for the image pictured here, in three words of 5, 6 and 4 letters – a verb, adjective and noun. The caption might be advice a fellow Scrabble player might have given to an opponent with “butterfingers” (not
the candy bar, but the annoying malady).

The 15 letters can be rearranged to spell the title of a children’s book.

What are this caption and book title?

ENTREE #10

Write a caption for the image pictured here, in two words of 7and 6 letters – two nouns (although the first noun does serve an adjectival purpose).

Those 13 letters can be anagrammed to spell the title of a beloved children’s book.

What are this caption and book title? 

ENTREE #11

Anagram the letters of a two-word, 7 and 6 letter children’s book title to get the surname of a brilliant Nobel-Prize-winning scientist and an 8-letter adjective describing this scientist that, when construed as a synonym of “superb,”
suggests an transcendent excellence that surpasses mere “surface beauty,” reaching beyond to the highest conceivable degree of elegance.

What is this book title?

Who is the scientist?

What is the adjective?

ENTREE #12

Anagram the letters of an 8-letter children’s book title to name either:

~ something you sit down for and what you do
during it (4,4)

Cleopatra (4,4)

perfect males (5,3)

Katz’s in New York City or Zingerman’s in Ann Arbr, Michigan (4,4)

What is this book title?

What are the four anagrams?

Dessert Menu

Brickyard Dessert:

“Hoosier pick to win at Indy?”

Place spaces between the three syllables of a part of some reptiles and other creatures – including crabs, lobsters, shrimp, barnacles, turtles, tortoises, and even some beetles. 
Move the first syllable to the end to get something you see at the Indianapolis 500. 

What are this creature part and Indy-500 sight?

Note: The answer to “Who’s your pick to win at Indy?” is not the Indy-500 sight.

Every Thursday at Joseph Young’s Puzzleria! we publish a new menu of fresh word puzzles, number puzzles, logic puzzles, puzzles of all varieties and flavors. We cater to cravers of scrumptious puzzles!

Our master chef, Grecian gourmet puzzle-creator Lego Lambda, blends and bakes up mysterious (and sometimes questionable) toppings and spices (such as alphabet soup, Mobius bacon strips, diced snake eyes, cubed radishes, “hominym” grits, anagraham crackers, rhyme thyme and sage sprinklings.)

Please post your comments below. Feel free also to post clever and subtle hints that do not give the puzzle answers away. Please wait until after 3 p.m. Eastern Time on Wednesdays to post your answers and explain your hints about the puzzles. We serve up at least one fresh puzzle every Thursday.

We invite you to make it a habit to “Meet at Joe’s!” If you enjoy our weekly puzzle party, please tell your friends about Joseph Young’s Puzzleria! Thank you.

54 comments:

  1. Note:
    To place a comment under this QUESTIONS? subheading (immediately below), or under any of the three subheadings below it (HINTS! PUZZLE RIFFS! and MY PROGRESS SO FAR...), simply left-click on the orange "Reply" to open a dialogue box where you can make a comment. Thank you.
    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  2. Replies
    1. Technically, the animals in the Dessert that have that body part are reptiles, not amphibians. I also thought that they were amphibians - apparently not!

      Delete
    2. Thank you, Tortitude. I appreciate your editing.

      LegoWhoNotes"I'mFabian(Not!)"ButWhatIAmIsAReplicatedTileWhichIsJustOneOfManyIdenticalWoodenScrabblePiecesThatRepresentALetter(ExceptForJKXZ)OnAScrabbleBoard!

      Delete
  3. Replies
    1. Not really sure if this is a hint or a riff - probably a little bit of both - but:
      The "likely baptismal name" in the Schpuzzle is also the last name of a famous actor and singer whose songs appeared in a movie by the writer-director in Entree #7.

      Drop a letter from the first name of the 20th-Century novelist/playwright and rearrange get the first name of a contemporary novelist. One of the novelist's works was inspired by one of the literary icon's works and was made into a movie starring the same actor as the movie hinted about above. One of the actor's children has the same first name as the playwright with the three-letter nickname.

      The four letters you dropped spell a common word.

      Delete
    2. SUNDAY HINTS FOR ENTREES 2-7:
      2. Beezus, Eliza, Dr. Kimble
      3. Penniman, Nelson
      4. NC arachnid.
      5. Anne don't call me Shirley.
      6. Vilgot Sjöman, Lena Nyman.
      7. Mr. Lauren, putrefying.

      Delete
    3. Nodd, up to now [i.e. the pre-hint phase], I have been missing only the book/future animated series first portion of your #7. [I had come up with what I THOUGHT was a great such book, meeting the clues, but then it was missing a 'P" which I needed for the writer/director...which name itself I'm sure MUST be correct, given that the character/play name meets the rest of the clue requirements. I simply can not reconcile the two halves.

      Delete
    4. I forgot to add that the hint doesn't help me in the slightest.. (I googled it, nothing arose.)

      Delete
    5. VT, the book does have a "P". The hint refers to the designer. Hope this helps.

      Delete
    6. I KNOW the book needs to have a "P"...that was the whole problem with the book I HAD picked out, and had to erase. By 'designer' above did you mean DIRECTOR? (I will go see thus if your hint fits my chosen director, but I can't imagine my choice is wrong. What I utterly need is a hint for the BOOK, since I've been thru lists (and you KNOW how much I just ADORE wading through lists!)

      Delete
    7. The first name of the designer (who is not the director) is the second word (5 letters) of the two-word book title. The designer is the Chaps/Polo guy. The first word of the title (6 letters) is a synonym of "putrefying." The book is about a cat who likes playing practical jokes.

      Delete
    8. And now, the moment you've all been waiting for:
      OFFICIAL CRYPTIC HINTS
      ACROSS
      7. If you put "nineteen" before this answer, you'll have my birth year. Simple as that.
      8. The evil counterpart of Sonic.
      10. This answer is a verb, sometimes associated with the job of a stripper(at least for this hint anyway!).
      11. Does the work of John Lennon, one might say? It's easy if you try.
      12. A character from the play named for 26 Across, he also shares his name with a character voiced by the late Gilbert Gottfried in a Disney film from the early 90s.
      13. A character from 14 Across's "A Midsummer Night's Dream".
      14. Considered by many to be the greatest writer in the history of literature, some skeptics believe it may well have been Francis Bacon(but that's another name for another puzzle).
      19. This answer was also the name of an American film noir crime film released in 1949, starring Dorothy Lamour, Sterling Hayden, and Dan Duryea.
      22. Another character from "A Midsummer Night's Dream", he shares his name with a cast member(nickname, actually)on "The Real World: San Francisco" in 1994, who was only the second to be evicted from the house in which they all lived.
      23. This answer is also the name of a card in the "Magic: The Gathering" card game.
      24. This answer is made up of two verbs put together, and is a synonym for a word in the clue which is normally used as a noun, but its rare verb use is the straightforward part of the clue.
      25. First invented by restaurant owner Bram Com brink in 1955, it could be another way of saying "harmless horse", according to the Rev. Spooner(creator of the "spoonerism").
      26. This character shares his name with a board game that is otherwise known as "Reversi".
      DOWN
      1. If you take this answer and replace the first letter with the fifth(making sure to remove the space left behind by doing so), you'll get the answer to 10 Across!
      2. There's one in the Book of Job.
      3. In the Piano Man's big hit of 1989, this answer's full name comes just before the names Malenkov, Nasser, and Prokofiev. What else do I have to say?!
      4. It's how one may prepare eggs, or if you prefer, how one may prepare anagrams(this is a puzzle website, after all!).
      5. Mills or Prowse(and both are British-American actresses, too!).
      6. This answer sounds like it would go right with 4 Down's, wouldn't it? At least the first syllable, anyway.
      9. Emmett Kelly, Bill Irwin, or Bozo would have it as their job description.
      15. He had three daughters: Goneril, Regan, and Cordelia. He also was based upon the British ruler for whom the city of Leicester was named.
      16. This answer has been used in the dialogue of sitcoms such as "Seinfeld" and "Friends", and in many Woody Allen movies.
      17. This answer is also a term used in chemistry, linguistics, mathematics, and botany. Excellent, dude!
      18. It also makes a believable surname, if you're the late Benny Hill.
      20. It can precede "blanket", "pool" or "argument".
      21. Lincoln/Douglas, Baldwin/Buckley, Nixon/Kennedy...
      pjbAlwaysGivesThePeopleWhatTheyWant,WithinReason

      Delete
    9. BTW Didn't notice until just now, but that should read "Bram Combrink", all one word. Just caught that! Sorry!
      pjbIsGladHeRunsEverythingTogetherInThisSignoff,SoThingsLikeThatDon'tHappen

      Delete
    10. Nodd, while I did solve #7 the first time around, that book was the only one of the Entrees I hadn't heard of before. Might be why VT is having trouble. I did find it on some list somewhere.

      Cranberry, thanks for the cryptic crossword hints. I made very little progress pre-hint (just the writer, handful of characters, and 2 Down), so I hope the hints will be helpful.

      Delete
    11. Late Hinting (Lego's Apologies!)
      Schpuzzle of the Week:
      Five limerical lines of literary lions

      The likely baptismal name of the first literary icon is also the surname of a past comedian named "Jimmy."
      Another, longer, nickname of the 20th-Century novelist/playwright was "Bulldog," which was given to him because of his habit of carrying a notepad and dictionary when he was about 11 years old. The name "Bulldog" was a reference to 'Bulldog Drummond,' a film character from the 1930s.

      Cryptic Crosswords By The Two-Score Appetizer:
      Fortieth Time’s Still the Charm!

      See cranberry's hints for his Cryptic Crossword Answers in his August 25, 2025 at 8:56 PM Comment, above.

      Time & Space Hors d’Oeuvre
      Endless & big-like vs. ended & twig-like

      There is a fish part within this vast and endless word.

      Chevy Nova Novella Slice
      “Lilliput-put-put-put...”

      Strombecker, Monogram, Revell...

      Riffing Off Shortz And Pegg Entrees:
      “Lay on, Macduff, Lady MacBeth! Out damn SweE.T. Spot!”

      ENTREE #1
      The word for the image in the lower-right portion of the illustration is an anagram of the combined letters in the surname of a past American writer and what the subjects of one of his most well-known poem do.

      Note: See Nodd's hints for his Entrees #2 through #7 in his August 24, 2025 at 8:20 PM Comment, above.

      ENTREE #8
      The words in the three blanks begin with O, W and T.
      The 9-letter synonym of “stamina” begins with an "end."
      The 7-letter synonym of “guts” begins with the ending of "begin."

      ENTREE #9
      I challenge you to spell the name of the author of the children's book without looking it up. (I can never do it!)

      ENTREE #10
      The 7-letter word in the caption is a "gimme," but the 6-letter word, which rhymes with a timepiece, is tougher.

      ENTREE #11
      The first 5 letters of the 8-letter adjective describing the scientist spell "a deep, narrow valley with steep sides, often formed by a river eroding through rock..." or can also refer to overeating.

      ENTREE #12
      The title of the 8-letter children’s, divided into two equal parts, spell a synonym of "created" and something that may be preceded by "dotted," "bread" or "What's my."

      Dessert Menu
      Brickyard Dessert:

      The "something you see at the Indianapolis 500" is seen only at the green flag, but is long gone before the checkered flag.

      LegoGoldbricking&Brickyarding&ApologizingForTheTardinessOfTheseHints!

      Delete
    12. Indeed, Tortie (and Nodd), altho I finally managed to Google the latest hint and find the Entree #7 book, I have certainly NEVER heard of it or its animated series, so never would have come up with it (how you found it on a list, Tortie, is beyond me.). Also, the reference to 'the designer' had gone right over my head, even today, as I went back through the Entree's presentation looking for the word 'desginer"...only just now as I prepared to type this post, that it was a general reference (and of course, now knowing the book title...duh all the way around.)

      The book I HAD selected originally, which made much more sense to me in terms of a follow-up series of books plus an animated series was ARTHUR'S NOSE., also published in 1976...which of course, lacked the required "P".

      Delete
    13. Having only just now FINALLY solved the Schpuzzle, I'd like to inquire of my fellow P!-ers HOW ON EARTH each of them solved the thing without today's hint? Even so, I just barely finally caught on.

      I am left upset that I seem to have been the only one NOT to have been able to latch onto the solution without the hint. First of all, I didn't even realize that by baptismal name, only the FIRST name was meant.

      Secondly, there were an infinite number of choices, so HOW did everyone else pounce upon the correct first literary person? Then how did you each know WHAT in heck letter to remove (without today's hint, that is)? I remain utterly non-plussed.

      Delete
    14. VT, I can't remember exactly how I solved the Schpuzzle, except to say that I hit upon the third literary icon and then thought of the second one. But then I hit a dead end, because the nickname I was going for ended in a letter that was not in the names of the two people I had. Then I tried two other writers (turned out the second one was the answer to the Slice, and was the wrong century anyway) and went back to the original. I think at that point I figured out the nickname (or at least the last letter of it), as I was trying for a different first name for icon #4 that led nowhere. Can't remember exactly how I found the first icon. I guess I had the first letter of the nickname by then so had all the letters, and also made some assumptions as to what kind of writer it would be. It was not a piece of trivia I knew and, ideally, I'd remember this if ever comes up again, but probably not!

      Delete
    15. Thanks for all that, Tortie. [I'm not sure I can actually follow it all, but at this point, I guess it doesn't matter.] I had actually had AUDEN written down originally, pre-hint, as well, but didn't know which way to go with it, since I had no idea WHERE in the string any name might land. And an follow-up "Edna" certainly never occurred to me, either.

      Delete
  4. Replies
    1. I haven't even tried the App yet, but I've finished everything else.

      Delete
  5. IF YOU HAVE COMMENTS THAT DO NOT PERTAIN TO ANY OF THE FOUR CATEGORIES ABOVE, YOU MAY WRITE THEM BELOW THIS POST. THANK YOU.

    ReplyDelete
  6. BTW If there is anyone here amongst our regulars who has not started on my latest puzzle, please DO NOT check out Blaine's Blog right now!
    Lego's promo for this week's P! is sort of a spoiler! If you have already seen it, please forget what you have read there before attempting to solve my puzzle here! Will explain Wednesday! Cranberry out!
    pjbToldLegoToRewriteTheIntroductionToThePuzzleSoAsNotToBe[TMI]RightOffTheBat...ButHeShould'veHadASayInThePromoOnBlaine'sAsWell!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. My apologies, Patrick. I tried to remedy my perhaps-TMI-promo by scrubbing-and-then-reposting a more cryptic version of my comment over on Blaine's fine blog.
      Legologetic

      Delete
    2. But on the upside, I've just solved everything already(not counting my own puzzle)! Did all the Entrees just now one by one, after basically starting with the Dessert, then the Slice, then the Hors d'Oeuvre, and then the Schpuzzle. If it weren't for my having to provide hints between now and Wednesday, you might not be hearing much more from me until then! JK I will be posting my (now un)official "first" post later this evening, talking about if we have eaten out tonight, and most likely mentioning our grocery run this afternoon, that sort of thing. Y'all have been warned. Cranberry(happily)out!
      pjbObviouslyWon'tAskForHintsFromAnyoneElse,ButHeWillNeedALittleTimeToMakeUpHisCrypticHints,Perhaps

      Delete
    3. Note: I wrote the following post before Patrick posted his August 22, 2025 at 7:34 PM comment (below) but didn't get around to posting it until now.
      Normally, our friend Patrick J. Berry posts his much anticipated Friday evening Family Dining Experience in this space.
      But this evening, we went out for our own lakeside dining experience...
      Mary and I, along with her sister Kathy, met a cousin and her husband at a restaurant near the lake cabin.
      First we had appetizers of walleye bites and fried pickle slices.
      Mary had (not a little lamb, but rather...) a pot roast sandwich with fries, while Kathy chose the "Shore Lunch" of "Pan-Fried Walleye, with fixin's." I, Lego, selected from the menu Hungarian Mushroom soup, a local specialty that alleviated my "Hungar."
      Mary's cousin and husband both ordered The Prime Rib.
      And we capped it all off with a delicious dessert of bread pudding.
      But even more satisfying than the cuisine was the dinner conversation! Robert regaled us with hilarious and intriguing family stories that often involved famous people.
      A good time was had by all!

      LegpPostingA(PaleByComparisonToPatrick's)AccountOfHisFridayEveningFamilyDiningExperience

      Delete
    4. Sounds like a lovely evening, Lego! I'm guessing that the fish was fresh from the lake.

      Delete
    5. Sounds like y'all had a great time, Lego! We're not eating out tonight, but Mom just went out to get something for me to eat from Whataburger. She'll be fixing her own supper here, though. She said she didn't feel like cooking for the both of us, but she did say we could get something from a drive-through, so I quickly looked over the Whataburger menu online, and wrote down an order for her. What was the name of the restaurant y'all went to, Lego?
      pjbWondersWhat"WalleyeBites"MustTasteLike(Well,FishObviously!)

      Delete
    6. And now, a cryptic clue(a freebie!)for WALLEYE:
      You and I walk in, looking for fish(7)
      ALLEY inside WE
      pjbKnowsACrypticCrosswordCanSeemQuiteFishyEnoughAsItIs!

      Delete
    7. Or: Rapper follows movie; fishy!

      Delete
    8. It's a bit late for me to be responding to Lego's Aug 22 post re his own Friday dining, but having only just now spotted it, I merely wanted to note that the PRIME RIB sounds fabulous to me! [I'm not much of a fish person. I don't even know what walleye IS!]

      Delete
    9. I imagine the Walleye bites are quite good. Mid West fish and chips as opposed to Cod or perhaps halibut here on the West coast- which reminds me of the time I had fish and chips in Wash.D.C. and was surprised to get these small whole fish -fried offerings that looked like a large sardine. I still don't know what they were. Mullet?
      The Walleye bites might go well with cheese curds and a nice Elysian larger.

      Delete
    10. I think Walleye might be a lot like Halibut a firm white fleshed fish without much-"Fishy flavor." But my favorite is still line caught Ling cod.

      Delete
  7. Happy Friday evening to you all in the P! universe!
    Mom and I are fine. We did not eat out tonight, but we probably will tomorrow night. Mia Kate will be coming over to clean house again, and we'll discuss it with her then. She would've come over Thursday, but she had her day in court. A minor traffic infraction was the reason. Bryan accompanied her, and they both were shocked to find two other people in court, unrelated in every way, but the judge banned them both from Walmart. Most likely two different reasons, or it could have been that they both did the exact same thing. Mom wouldn't tell me anything other than that. Also, Mia Kate may have had a date with Austin earlier this evening. We don't really know. Anyway, Mom and I spent the day grocery shopping, first at Aldi, and then again at Winn-Dixie(after Mom was done with her "drinks" game online, some part of "June's Journey" she always has to take part in every day around 5:30pm). Among the usual things we had to get(actually me, because she didn't feel much like going in Aldi, but if she had she would've gotten a new chopper, and she never told me where to look for it, so no chopper)were some AA batteries. We'd had some problems with our remotes lately, so I got three packs of about 8 or maybe 16, one for each(mine in my bedroom, hers in her bedroom, and the one in the living room). I didn't know where to look for them, so I had to ask the checkout lady. She pointed just a few inches from where she was sitting. If I would've looked over there first, I wouldn't have had to ask. But I didn't, so I had to, naturally. Later at Winn-Dixie, I tried to make up for not finding cottage cheese at Aldi, but I forgot she had said do NOT get the low-fat kind. She did eat some of it before I had to fix her dinner. I also had to get a few microwaveable meals in WD, and she decided she wanted one for supper. I also had to use the restroom in both stores(number one), and then I had to do number two here, before unloading all that we'd bought for the second time today. I also put in a little laundry so I'd have something clean to wear if and when we eat out tomorrow. I also have the Guardian Prize Crossword and the Private Eye Crossword, and maybe Wordle etc. after finishing here.
    As I said in my previous post, I have actually solved everything else here this week besides my own puzzle. Although I personally will not be needing it from the others contributing here, I will still be asking for hints on behalf of everyone else on this blog. And this time, if I can't make heads or tails of any of them, I won't even care, because I'm already done here as of last night around midnight or 1:00am! Of course, I will be offering hints for the cryptic answers, as I said before, and in my signoff I also said it may take some time to come up with some good ones. It's hard enough trying to come up good cryptic clues as it is, but to try to double down on those can be much harder. But rest assured, y'all will have hints eventually. I'm not going to pull an SDB on everyone. I do care enough about my own work to try to be helpful, after all.
    As always, in closing, good luck in solving to you all, and please stay safe, and if I can remember I'll be sure to tell everyone here about our night out tomorrow evening. Cranberry out!
    pjbWouldLoveToHearMoreAboutTheWalmartStory!

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    Replies
    1. I'm surprised that Mia Kate had to appear in court for a minor traffic violation. Here in NJ, we can just pay the fine and get a few points on our license. There's always the option of fighting the charge in court, however, but most people don't bother to do that.

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    2. That's funny, "Pull an SDB on everyone." Well since we are all relating recent culinary pursuits- let me pause for a moment and tell you a bit about the trip to see my older son in Canton,Ga. Unfortunately we did not make it to Waffle house or William;s brother's barbecue as I had planned. But we did make it to the wonderful Keithsburg Cafe out in Canton toward Battleground, Ga. where Verie had some very wonderful pecan pancakes -chock full of pecans and each cake was the size of a dinner plate -i kid you not. I had the Western omelet with grits and a cathead biscuit with a side order of sausage gravy- which I' did not really need. ( this little cafe is a treasured local spot for breakfast). The omelet was just okay with country ham and cheddar cheese, onions and bell peppers. The grits were great with brown sugar and half and half. I kind of miss grits after it took me a while -(seven years to get used to them). The gravy was great and like I said I did not really need, Washed it down with some cafe. Verie could only finish the one pancake so we got a Togo box and I got a Togo coffee- which is kind of tradition in the south. The waitress was super nice and I left a nice tip for her. If you get a chance check out this place. At the end they gave us a first responder discount as my son is as you know a fireman. Keithsburg cafe. Breakfast experts in Canton area.Thinking of moving back. I miss getting Marjory Taylor Greens's live feed. The bill for three of us was like 30 dollars and would be about twice this in Seattle which is super crazy expensive now. I am not sure we can stay here where the median price of a house is not a million. Can you believe it?

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    3. Now a million not , not a million.LOL

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    4. Sounds like a wonderful meal, PS, especially the pancakes! I had to look up cathead biscuits.

      House prices are ridiculous right now. So much of society is not sustainable, especially the cost of higher education / student loans.

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  8. I actually had a related puzzle up and ready to go for this week's riffs, but I was slow sending it in. I wrote the puzzle a few months ago. I'm toying with sending it to Will, but I think it's a bit too simple. The puzzle is straightforward and elegant, I think, and surprisingly, there's no overlap with the current riffs. Most likely, I'll send it in my next batch of Tortie's Slow but Sure Puzzles (aptly named!).

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    Replies
    1. I am looking forward to seeing your related riffy puzzle, Tortie, but I always suggest sending puzzles to Will first. You just never know what might strike his fancy!

      LegoWhoWillBeProudToFeatureTortitude'sRelated PuzzleOnPuzzleriaIfNPRDoesn't"SnatchItUpFirst!"

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    2. Thanks, Lego! My puzzle isn't nearly as good as Ed Pegg Jr's puzzle or Bobby's current puzzle, but probably is in the ballpark of some others.

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  9. SCHPUZZLE–DANTE ALIGHIERI, PABLO NERUDA, W.H. AUDEN, EDNA O’BRIEN, TRUMAN CAPOTE
    HORS D’OEUVRE–INFINITY; FINI, TINY
    SLICE–?? (I believe the answer is Tolstoy and toy slot car, but I didn’t get it till just now.)
    ENTREES
    1. ED PEGG, JUNIOR; PRIDE, JUNO, EGG/JUDGE, PERIGON
    2. HENRY HUGGINS, HENRY HIGGINS, ROY HUGGINS
    3. THE LITTLE PRINCE, STUART LITTLE, HAL PRINCE
    4. CHARLOTTE’S WEB, HEBREWS, LOUISA MAY ALCOTT
    5. ANNE OF GREEN GABLES, “ANNIE”, GREER GARSON, CLARK GABLE
    6. CURIOUS GEORGE, GEORGE CUKOR
    7. ROTTEN RALPH, “A DOLL’S HOUSE”, NORA EPHRON
    8. ENDURANCE, INNARDS, OLD WIVES’ TALE, ALICE’S ADVENTURES IN WONDERLAND
    9. PINCH LETTER TILE, THE LITTLE PRINCE
    10. SWEATER BLOTCH, CHARLOTTE’S WEB
    11. CURIOUS GEORGE, MARIE CURIE, GORGEOUS
    12. MADELINE, MEAL DINE, NILE DAME, IDEAL MEN, DELI NAME
    DESSERT–CARAPACE, A PACE CAR

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  10. Schpuzzle: DURANTE (DANTE), PABLO NERUDA, W. H. AUDEN, EDNA FERBER, TRU (TRUMAN CAPOTE)
    App (almost all post-hint):
    Across: 7. SEVENTY; 8. SCOURGE; 10. REVEAL; 11. IMAGINES; 12. IAGO; 13. NICKBOTTOM; 14. SHAKESPEARE; 19. MANHANDLED; 22. PUCK; 23. DISALLOW; 24. BERATE; 25. NAMETAG; 26. OTHELLO
    Down: 1. SEVERAL; 2. BEHEMOTH; 3. STALIN; 4. SCRAMBLED; 5. JULIET; 6. EGGEDON; 9. CIRCUSCLOWN; 15. KINGLEAR; 16. REPARTEE; 17. RADICAL; 18. SCUTTLE; 20. HEATED; 21. DEBATE
    Hors d’Oeuvre: INFINITY, FINI, TINY
    Slice: LEO TOLSTOY; TOY SLOT CAR
    Entrees:
    1. ED PEGG JUNIOR; PRIDE, JUNO, EGG, JUDGE, PERIGON
    2. HENRY HUGGINS, HENRY HIGGINS, ROY HUGGINS
    3. THE LITTLE PRINCE, STUART LITTLE, HAL PRINCE
    4. CHARLOTTE’S WEB, HEBREWS, (LOUISA MAY) ALCOTT
    5. ANNE OF GREEN GABLES, ANNIE, GREER GARSON, CLARK GABLE
    6. CURIOUS GEORGE, GEORGE CUKOR
    7. ROTTEN RALPH, A DOLL’S HOUSE, NORA EPHRON (used the list found here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:1976_children%27s_books)
    8. ENDURANCE, INNARDS, OLD WIVES’ TALE, ALICE’S ADVENTURES IN WONDERLAND
    9. PINCH LETTER TILE, THE LITTLE PRINCE
    10. SWEATER BLOTCH, CHARLOTTE’S WEB
    11. CURIOUS GEORGE; MARIE (or PIERRE) CURIE; GORGEOUS
    12. MADELINE; MEAL DINE, NILE DAME, IDEAL MEN, DELI NAME
    Dessert: CARAPACE, A PACE CAR

    Riff/hint thingy: Jimmy Durante’s music was featured in Sleepless in Seattle. Drop the “E” from Edna and rearrange to get “Dan.” Dan Brown’s book Inferno had clues based on Dante’s Inferno. Both the Sleepless in Seattle and Inferno movies starred Tom Hanks, who has a son named Truman. The dropped letters spell “true.”

    I initially got stuck on the Schpuzzle after figuring out AUDEN and then NERUDA rather quickly, because I thought the three-letter nickname was going to be ART (for Arthur Miller) but there was no “T” in AUDEN. I then pivoted to NOEL (Coward) and then LEO (Tolstoy). But Tolstoy was from the wrong century, so went back to NERUDA -> AUDEN. Then went through the letters one by one for the last letter to be dropped, and got to “U” -> EDNA (not DEAN, I as I originally was going for). Then figured the first dropped letter was “T” (for Truman Capote). Then I knew the first answer was “T” + NERUDA, but I can’t remember if I figured out DURANTE first or went to Dante. I figured “likely” was a hint that it was a much older writer. I also thought that it was likely that the author used a pen name/mononym.

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    Replies
    1. There seem to be at least two possible answers for "Edna" in the Schpuzzle. Both Ferber and O'Brien wrote novels and plays in the 20th Century, though Ferber was born in the 19th and O'Brien died in the 21st.

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    2. SCHPUZZLE: DURANTE [Dante] minus “T” => NERUDA minus “R” => AUDEN minus “U” => EDNA [Ferber]; Letters removed: TRU for TRUMAN CAPOTE

      HORS D’O: INFINITY => FINI & TINY

      SLICE: TOLSTOY => TOY SLOT CAR

      ENTREES:

      1. ED PEGG JUNIOR => PRIDE, JUNO, EGG; JUDGE, PERIGON [a word I’d SOMEHOW never heard in my whole life]

      2. HENRY HUGGINS => HENRY HIGGINS; ROY HUGGINS. [Never heard of this director; originally Google came up with ROBERT ALTMAN]

      3. THE LITTLE PRINCE => STUART LITTLE; HAL PRINCE

      4. CHARLOTTES WEB => ALCOTT & HEBREWS

      5. ANNE OF GREEN GABLES => ANNIE; GREEN => GREER GARSON; GABLES => CLARK GABLE

      6. CURIOUS GEORGE => GEORGE CUKOR

      7. ROTTEN RALPH => NORA EPHRON; A DOLL’S HOUSE

      8. OLD WIVES TALE; ENDURANCE / INNARDS => ALICE’S ADVENTURES IN WONDERLAND

      9. PINCH LETTER TILE => THE LITTLE PRINCE. [I’d been trying to use CLASP/GRASP WOODEN TILE]

      10. SWEATER BLOTCH => CHARLOTTE’S WEB

      11. CURIE GORGEOUS => CURIOUS GEORGE

      12. MADELINE => NILE DAME; IDEAL MEN; DELI NAME

      DESSERT: CARAPACE => A PACE CAR

      I remain amused at the triple ‘cross over’ of entree answers between Nodd’s puzzles and Lego’s this week [i.e. Charlotte’s Web, Curious George and The Little Prince]

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  11. Schpuzzle
    DURANTE(Dante Alighieri), (Pablo)NERUDA, (Wystan Hugh)AUDEN, EDNA(St. Vincent Millay was the first one I found), and the dropped letters spell TRU, which is the nickname of Truman Capote.
    Cryptic answers? See Lego's recap later.
    Hors d'Oeuvre
    INFINITY=FINI+TINY
    Slice
    (Leo)TOLSTOY, TOY SLOT CAR
    Entrees
    1. ED PEGG, JUNIOR=PRIDE+JUNO+EGG or JUDGE+PERIGON
    2. "HENRY HUGGINS", HENRY HIGGINS(or 'enry 'iggins, as Eliza Doolittle might say), ROY HUGGINS
    3. "THE LITTLE PRINCE", "STUART LITTLE", HAL PRINCE
    4. "CHARLOTTE'S WEB"=(Louisa May)ALCOTT+HEBREWS
    5. "ANNE OF GREEN GABLES" "ANNIE", GREER GARSON, CLARK GABLE, "ADVENTURE"(1946)
    6. "CURIOUS GEORGE", GEORGE CUKOR
    7. "ROTTEN RALPH"(I too thought it was "Arthur's Nose" at first), NORA EPHRON, "A DOLL'S HOUSE", by Henrik Ibsen
    8. OLD WIVES' TALE+ENDURANCE+INNARDS="ALICE'S ADVENTURES IN WONDERLAND"
    9. PINCH LETTER TILE="THE LITTLE PRINCE"(again)
    10. SWEATER BLOTCH="CHARLOTTE'S WEB"(again)
    11. "CURIOUS GEORGE" (again)=(Marie)CURIE+GORGEOUS
    12. "MADELINE"=MEAL, DINE; NILE DAME; IDEAL MEN; DELI NAME
    Brickyard Dessert
    CARAPACE, A PACE CAR
    Another interesting thing about Hal Prince: He died in Reykjavik, Iceland. Wonder what he was doing there?-pjb


    ReplyDelete
  12. This week's official answers for the record, part 1:
    Schpuzzle of the Week:
    Five limerical lines of literary lions

    Drop a letter from the likely baptismal name of a literary icon.
    Anagram the result to get the eventual surname of a 20th-Century poet.
    Drop a letter and anagram this result to get the surname of a 20th-Century poet.
    Drop a letter and anagram that result to get the first name of a 20th-Century novelist/playwright.
    The three letters you removed, in order, spell a nickname of a 20th-Century novelist/playwright.
    Who are these five literary lions?
    Answer:
    1. Dante Alighieri (likely baptized DURANTE Alighieri)
    2. Pablo Neruda (DURANTE – T = NERUDA)
    3. W.H. Auden (NERUDA – R = AUDEN)
    4. Edna St. Vincent Millay (AUDEN – U = EDNA)
    5. Truman Capote (nicknamed "Tru")
    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  13. This week's official answers for the record, part 2:
    Note: The filled-in Cryptic Crossword Grid appears just above this Comments Section

    Cryptic Crosswords By The Two-Score Appetizer:
    Fortieth Time’s Still the Charm!

    ANSWERS:
    ACROSS

    7. Very many like being stuck in hole?(7)
    SEVENTY
    EVEN inside STY
    8. Rush to entertain company? It’s a burden!(7)
    SCOURGE
    SURGE containing CO.
    10. Have fun, take in a show(6)
    REVEAL
    REVEL containing A
    11. Some innocently playing games, in pictures(8)
    IMAGINES
    I+GAMESIN anagram
    12. 14 character, a success after first intermission?(4)
    IAGO
    I+A+GO
    13. Pinch butt of 14 character?(4,6)
    NICK BOTTOM
    NICK+BOTTOM
    14. Writer to brandish weapon by the end?(11)
    SHAKESPEARE
    SHAKE+SPEAR+E
    19. Chap dealt with being mistreated(10)
    MANHANDLED
    MAN+HANDLED
    22. 14 character, one getting hit at a hockey game?(4)
    PUCK
    double definition
    23. I would turn pale and stop(8)
    DISALLOW
    I'D reversed+SALLOW
    24. Rodent chewing through fancy carpet(6)
    BERATE
    RAT inside BEE
    25. Worry about meat going bad, seeing label(7)
    NAMETAG
    NAG containing MEAT anagram
    26. 14 character to return? Well, this is certainly a surprise!(7)
    OTHELLO
    TO reversed+HELLO

    DOWN
    1. Some cut quite short(7)
    SEVERAL
    SEVER+ALL-L
    2. Hard to get through flying insects for such a huge creature?(8)
    BEHEMOTH
    H inside BEE+MOTH
    3. Former Communist leader left in disgrace(6)
    STALIN
    L inside STAIN
    4. Go on supporting socially conscious leaders, getting rush(8)
    SCRAMBLE
    S+C+RAMBLE
    5. 14 character “simply has no son,” claims story(6)
    JULIET
    JUST-S containing LIE
    6. Urged, say, to get information about party(5,2)
    EGGED ON
    E.G.+GEN containing DO
    9. Performer to use profanity(almost)during short set, sad to have “lost head”(6,5)
    CIRCUS CLOWN
    CUSS-S inside CIRCLE-E+DOWN-D
    15. 14 character with awfully large family coming over?(4,4)
    KING LEAR
    KIN+LARGE anagram
    16. Barely left in extremely risque quips(8)
    REPARTEE
    (d)EPARTE(d)inside R(isqu)E
    17. Total car, initially puncturing tire(7)
    RADICAL
    C inside RADIAL
    18. Scrap cryptic clues about one who does not drink alcohol(7)
    SCUTTLE
    CLUES anagram containing TT(teetotaler)
    20. Excited chap had date(6)
    HEATED
    HE+ATE+D
    21. Be up in time for discussion(6)
    DEBATE
    BE reversed inside DATE

    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  14. This week's official answers for the record, part 3:
    MENU:
    Time & Space Hors d’Oeuvre
    Endless & big-like vs. ended & twig-like
    Take a word that means vastness and endlessness, spatially and temporally.
    The first half is an anagram of a French word for “ended.”
    The second half of this word can be rearranged to spell a synonym of “small.”
    What are this word and its two unexpected anagrams?
    Answer:
    Infinity; fini, tiny

    Chevy Nova Novella Slice
    “Lilliput-put-put-put...”
    The last three letters of a novelist’s surname, followed by a reverse ordering of the remaining letters in the name, followed by the word “car” spell a kind of VERY COMPACT vehicle.
    Who is the novelist?
    What is the vehicle?
    Answer:
    toy slot car; Leo Tolstoy;

    Riffing Off Shortz And Pegg Entrees:
    “Lay on, Macduff, Lady MacBeth! Out damn SweE.T. Spot!”
    Will Shortz’s August 17th Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, from Ed Pegg Jr., who conducts mathpuzzle.com, reads:
    Take the classic illustrated children’s book Sylvester and the Magic Pebble.
    Rearrange its 26 letters to name a famous film director (first and last names) and a noted role on stage (in two words).
    What are these things?
    Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Pegg Entrees read:

    ENTREE #1
    Replace an abbreviation in the name of a puzzle-maker with the word of which it is an abbreviation. Rearrange the letters of this newly unabbreviated name to spell either the three missing words in the left side of the illustration or the two missing words on the right side.
    Who is this puzzle-maker?
    What are the five missing words?
    Answer:
    Ed Pegg Junior (Jr.);
    pride, Juno, egg; judge, perigon

    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  15. This week's official answers for the record, part 4:
    (The following six riffs are coutesy of Nodd)

    Entrees #2 through #7 are conundrums drummed-up/dreamt-up by our friend and riffmeister Nodd.
    ENTREE #2
    Name a well-known children’s book from the 1950s, in two words totaling 12 letters. Change the seventh letter to a different vowel to spell the name of a noted role on stage.
    Now go back to the two-word book title. Remove a word for a female bird from the first word of the title and replace it with an “o”. Slightly rearrange the letters of the first word of the title to spell a man’s name. That name, followed by the second word of the book title, is the name of a creator and producer of popular television shows who also directed films released in 1952 and 1970.
    What are the book and the stage role, and who is the creator/producer/director?
    Answer:
    HENRY HUGGINS, HENRY HIGGINS, ROY HUGGINS
    ENTREE #3
    Name a book that is styled as a children’s book but features adult themes. It was first published in the 1940s and eventually sold an estimated 140 million copies. The title consists of three words totaling 15 letters.
    The second word of the title is also the second word of the title of a well-known children’s book, also published in the 1940s. That book was made into a film that came out in the 1990s.
    The third word of the title of the first book is the surname of a deceased theatre director and producer who directed or produced 41 Broadway shows.
    What are the two books, and who is the director/producer?
    Answer:
    THE LITTLE PRINCE, STUART LITTLE, HAL PRINCE
    ENTREE #4
    Name a classic children’s book in two words totaling 13 letters. Rearrange the letters to form:
    (1) the surname of the author of a classic 19th Century children’s novel also enjoyed by adults, and
    (2) the title of a book of the Bible. What are the two books, and who is the author?
    Answer:
    CHARLOTTE’S WEB, HEBREWS, LOUISA MAY ALCOTT

    ENTREE #5
    Name a classic children’s book of the early 20th Century in four words totaling 17 letters. The first word, with an “i” inserted, is the titular role in a musical that opened in the 1970s and ran on Broadway for almost six years.
    The third word of the book title, with the last letter changed to an “r”, is the first name of a famous actress whose acting career spanned from the early 1930s to the late 1960s. The fourth word of the book title, minus the last letter, is the surname of a famous actor whose acting career spanned from the early 1920s until 1960. The actress and actor starred together in a 1946 film.
    What are the book title and the musical, and who are the actress and actor?
    Answer:
    ANNE OF GREEN GABLES, “ANNIE”, GREER GARSON, CLARK GABLE

    ENTREE #6
    Name a classic children’s book published in the 1940s, in two words totaling 13 letters. The book later became a film and a stage production.
    The second word of the book title is the first name of a famous film director. The first word of the title, with three letters replaced with a letter that is commonly used to signify a number, can be arranged to spell the director’s last name. What is the book, and who is the director?
    Answer:
    CURIOUS GEORGE, GEORGE CUKOR

    ENTREE #7
    Name a children’s book published in 1976 that eventually became a series of books and an animated television series, in two words totaling 11 letters. Six of the letters can be arranged to spell the surname of a well-known film writer and director whose movies appeared in the 1990s and 2000s.
    Four of the letters can be arranged to spell the first name of the writer-director, which is also the name of the protagonist in a famous stage play from the 19th Century. (To spell both the first and last names of the writer-director, two letters from the book title are used twice, and three letters are left over.) The title of the stage play sounds like it might be for children, but it is not.
    What are the book and the play, and who is the writer-director?
    Answer:
    ROTTEN RALPH, “A DOLL’S HOUSE”, NORA EPHRON

    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  16. This week's official answers for the record, part 5:

    ENTREE #8
    “Women distance runners do not possess the ‘stamina’ and ‘guts’ that men are blessed with.” That is an example of an “___ _____’ ____” (3, 5 and 4 letters).
    Take the 12 letters in those three words and combine them with a 9-letter synonym of “stamina” and a 7-letter synonym of “guts.” Rearrange these 28 letters to spell the title of a classic children’s book.
    What are these two synonyms, three missing words, and children’s book title?
    Hint: The classic children’s book is definitely NOT an example of the three missing words in the blanks.
    Answer:
    Endurance, Innards; Old Wives’ Tale; Alice's Adventures in Wonderland

    ENTREE #9
    Write a caption for the image pictured here, in three words of 5, 6 and 4 letters – a verb, adjective and noun. The caption might be advice a fellow Scrabble player might have given to an opponent with “butterfingers” (not the candy bar, but the annoying malady).
    The 15 letters can be rearranged to spell the title of a children’s book.
    What are this caption and book title?
    Answer:
    "Pinch letter tile"; "The Little Prince"

    ENTREE #10
    Write a caption for the image pictured here, in two words of 7and 6 letters – two nouns (although the first one serves an adjectival purpose).
    Those 13 letters can be anagrammed to spell the title of a beloved children’s book.
    What are this caption and book title?
    Answer:
    "Sweater Blotch"; "Charlotte's Web"

    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  17. This week's official answers for the record, part 6:
    ENTREE #11
    Anagram the letters of a two-word 7 and 6 letter children’s book title to get the surname of a brilliant Nobel-Prize-winning scientist and an 8-letter adjective describing this scientist that, when construed as a synonym of “superb,” suggests an transcendent excellence that surpasses mere “surface beauty,” reaching beyond to the highest conceivable degree of elegance.
    What is this book title?
    Who is the scientist?
    What is the adjective?
    Answer:
    "Curious George"; (Marie) Curie; "Gorgeous"
    https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/gorgeous

    ENTREE #12
    Anagram the letters of an 8-letter children’s book title to name either:
    something you sit down for and what you do during it (4,4)
    Cleopatra (4,4)
    perfect males (5,3)
    Katz’s in New York City or Zingerman’s in Ann Arbor, Michigan (4,4)
    What is this book title?
    What are the four anagrams?
    Answer:
    "Madeline";
    Meal, dine; Nile dame; Ideal men; Deli name

    Dessert Menu
    Brickyard Dessert:
    “Hoosier pick to win at Indy?”
    “Who’s your pick to win at Indy?”
    Place spaces between the three syllables of a part of some reptiles and other creatures – including crabs, lobsters, shrimp, barnacles, turtles, tortoises, and even some beetles.
    Move the first syllable to the end to get something you see at the Indianapolis 500.
    What are this creature part and Indy-500 sight?.
    Move the first syllable to the end to get something you see at the Indianapolis 500.
    What are this amphibian part and Indy-500 sight?
    Note: The answer to “Who’s your pick to win at Indy?” is not “the Indy-500 sight.”
    Answer:
    Carapace; A pace car

    Lego!

    ReplyDelete