Constructor: Byron Walden
Relative difficulty: Medium
THEME: noneWord of the Day: MESONIC (
3D: Of pions and kions) —
adj. of or relating to MESON
n.
Any of a family of subatomic particles that participate in strong interactions, are composed of a quark and an antiquark, and have masses generally intermediate between leptons and baryons.
• • •
Slower than I should've been, largely because I saw Byron's name and braced myself for brutality. I became very suspicious when answers started going into the grid, thinking "surely this is some grand trap." But the puzzle actually ended up being pretty pliable for a Saturday. Average—maybe even slightly on the easy side (correcting for my overly slow and cautious start). Byron's grids are usually pretty spectacular, often chock full of fresh and unusual entries (today, see especially
NO DRAMA (
13D: Obama descriptor),
PRII (45A: Automotive plural selected in a 2011 promotion),
DER BINGLE (!!?) (
11D: "White Christmas" singer, informally). There is some clunkiness here and there—
PUNTED ON (16A: Opted to duck) is a fresh phrase, but for some reason I'm finding it slightly ungainly, especially crossing
KNEEL AT (14D: Show reverence to, in a way). Clearly I'm having issues with appended prepositions (see also
EXERT ON). But the bulk of this grid is clean and lively, and the cluing was tough but interesting and fair. Enjoyable.
I entered the grid in the most banal of ways—via the crossing of
AT TWO and
AT. NO. At first I had TWO AM, but [
W's is 74] pretty much screamed
AT. NO, even though I have no idea what "W" is (it's tungsten). So I went with
AT TWO and then considered running GEEK alongside it, but noticed
NERD just meshed better with the adjacent letters (
5D: Pi Day celebrant, perhaps). That gave me
DESTRY (I think I have a copy of "Destry Rides Again" somewhere...) (
17A: 1954 Audie Murphy western) and
DRY SEASON (6D: Late October to March, in West Africa) and I was on my way. Had ULSTER for
EXETER at first (
15A: First city bombed in W.W. II's Baedeker Blitz). That's as hairy as things got in the NW. Had to guess at the
REMAND / MESONIC crossing (
1A: Back order? / 3D: Of pions and kions), but nothing else made sense. Struggled a bit in the NE as I worked out that "Main" meant "the sea" at
7A: Main means of defense? (SQUID INK) and that LIMOSINE was not a correct spelling (
18A: Prom amenity => LIMO RIDE). SW must've been pretty easy 'cause I don't remember doing it. Couldn't decide how to spell
LUCRE (44A: Dark green?). Was correct, then decided that FIRES were the things that "may be stoked," so changed
LUCRE to LUCER, which, as I look at it now, is ridiculous.
SE was also easy, as the two plural Downs (with their terminal "S"s) made
NASSER easy to get (
55A: Tito's successor as head of the Non-Aligned Movement). Also
PRII was a major gimme. Cluing was pretty strong overall, but I especially enjoyed
[It often comes with a "Thank You"] (RECEIPT) and
[A heavy metal band may have it] (ORE) and
[Pounded side] (POI)—I knew "side" would mean "side dish," but it took me a while to figure out that it was the corm of the taro root that was being pounded. I'm slightly surprised we don't see
POI more often. . . but apparently we see it reasonably often, because cruciverb tells me it's the second most popular of all -OI options, just barely behind ROI and well ahead of third-place MOI. So what I'm really surprised by is the fact that I have failed to notice how common
POI really is. Until now. I believe I have now provided you all with the single most useless piece of trivia of all time: what is the second most common crossword answer following the pattern -OI? Stump your friends!
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
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