INDEX

Abbreviations, 47, 101, 122

Abebe, Nitsuh, 144

Across

book section defined, xi

creating numbering system, 11

origin of jargon, 20–21

Acrostics (puzzle), 7, 21–25, 32, 86, 134, 144. See also Mnemonics

Adams, Franklin P., 9

Addiction, crosswording as

cheating and, 95–96

depiction in TV and movies, 137–138

enforcement of punishment, 15

hold on Victorian England, 22

impact on relationships, 109–112

lure of cryptic crossword to, 76–78

researching motivations, 98–99

satisfying need for puzzles, 8

sharing experience with others, 113–115

The Adventures of Mr. Verdant Green (Bede), 24

Afrit’s Injunction, 37–39

“A Funny Thing Happened to Stephen Sondheim” (Lebrecht), 177

Age-related mental health, crosswording and, 97–102

Alhaddad, Sawsan (Dr.), 131–132

All About Steve (movie), 115

“All-over interlock,” 11, 49, 80, 95, 163

Alphametic (aka cryptarithm), 12

Alzheimer’s, staving off onset, x, 97–102

American Civil War, 162–164

American Crossword Puzzle Tournament

1999 competition, 74–75

2012 competition, 119–121

competition stress and pressure, 103–104

training tips, 106–108

Anagram (puzzle), 4, 25–28, 60, 79, 82–87, 114, 125, 157

Anderson, John B., 65

Antonyms, 101

Archer, Lord Jeffrey, 67, 78, 87–88

Armchair Crosswords: A Book of Leisure Moments (Ritchie), 37, 177

Armstrong, Lance, 66

Artificial intelligence, 119

Artificial language, 7, 34

The Art of the Spoonerism (Étienne), 71

Augarde, Tony, 176

Bacon, Francis, 21

Balfour, Sandy, 175–176

Bass, Jennie, 116–117

Bately, Alfred, 33–34

Beastie Boys (music group), 59

The Beatles (music group), 3

Bede, Cuthbert, 24

Beeman, Mark, 107

Bell, Adrian, 18–19, 38

Bell, Martin, 18

Bello, David, 55

Berg Cloud, 166–167

Bernstein, Leonard, 76

Berry, Patrick, 68

The Bible, 25

Biddlecombe, Peter, 107

Big Daves’s Crossword Blog, 175

The Big Sleep (Chandler), 135

Black Speech (made-up language), 34

Bombaugh, C. C., 177

Book returns, publisher practice of, 10

Borges, Jorge Luis, 55

The Boston Globe, 116–117

Bowra, Maurice, 70

Brief Encounter (movie), 109–112, 155

British Diplomatic Oral History Programme (BDOHP), 178

Brontë, Charlotte, 21

Brooksbank, Peter, 105

Brooks, James L., 139–140

Brooks, Rebekah, 31

Buchan, John (Lord Tweedsmuir), 129–130

Burton, Dan, 148

Carroll, Lewis, 36–37, 39

Carruthers, F. D., 11

Carter, Jimmy, 65

Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), 131–132

Chamberlain, Austen, 156

Chambers Crossword Manual (Manley), 44, 175

The Chambers Dictionary, 58, 78

Championships. See Tournaments and Championships

Chandler, Raymond, 135

Character, crosswording and, 172–173

Charade clues, 85

Cheating, rules about, 91–96

Christie, Agatha, 21, 135–136

Clerihew (poem format), 12

Clinton, William J. (“Bill”), 63–65, 67, 103–104, 148

Cloud computing, crosswording and, 166–167

Clue(s). See also Crossword construction

acrostic, 7, 21–25, 32, 86, 134, 144

anagram, 4, 25–28, 60, 79, 82–83, 86–88, 114, 125, 157

as basic unit of crossword, 31

charade, 85

computer-generated puzzles, 121–124

cryptic definition, 81–82

deductive reasoning and, 172–173

double definition, 80

hidden answer, 83–84

multiple meanings, 63–65

origin of jargon, 20–21

“penny-drop” moment of clarity, 98–99

playing tricks and maintaining fairness, 36–39, 146–148

reversal, 84–85

role in whodunit mysteries, 134–136

role in wordplay, 25–26

soundalikes, 85–86

translations into other languages, 52–55

use of palindrome, 26–28

use of slang, 57–60

A Clue to Our Lives (Balfour), 175–176

The Code of the Woosters (Wodehouse), 156

Colonel Rémy (Gilbert Renault), 72

Computers and digital advances. See Technology, crosswording and

Coward, Noël, 109

Cox, Emily, 116–117

Creadon, Patrick, 176

Cresswell, I., 77

Crime of the Crossword (Garland), 137

Crisp, Ruth (“Crispa”), 123

Crossword bots, 119–121

Crossword construction. See also Clue(s); Grid

about beginning, 10, 26, 115, 162–164

adapting language differences, 49–51

basic units of crosswording, 31

beyond printed puzzles, 165–171

breaking rules of decorum and taste, 147–152

computer-generated puzzles, 121–122

creating ability to “lose gracefully,” 122

creating clues, 37, 39–40, 93, 122–123

cryptic clues, 79–88

depiction in novels, 134–138

favorite English words, 45–48

getting facts wrong, 145–146

learning the art, 115

replacement of print, 165–169

staving off dementia, 102

use of spoonerisms, 73

using slang, 58–60

using the nina, 32–35, 141

Crossword constructors

about anonymity and pseudonyms, 81–82

Adrian Bell, 18–19, 38

A. F. Ritchie (“Afrit”), 37–39, 83–84

Brendan Emmett Quigley, 32, 58, 79, 114

Brian Greer, 83

Bunthorne, 86

Chifonie, 86

Colin Dexter, 137

David Moseley (“Gordius”), 57

Don Manley, 44–45, 74

Edward Powys Mathers (“Torquemada”), 73, 81, 134

Emily Cox, 116–117

Eric Westbrook, 168–169

Georges Perec, 45, 53, 134

Henry Rathvon, 116–117

Jerry Farrell, 62, 64–65, 177

John Graham (“Araucaria”), 87–88, 150–152

John Henderson (“Enigmatist”), 98

John Lampkin, 48

Kathryn Friedlander, 98–99, 101–102

Leonard Berstein, 77

Leonard Dawe, 130–131

Lewis Carroll, 36–37, 39

Matt Ginsberg, 119–120

Merl Reagle, 141–144, 148–149

Mudd, 83, 86

Notabili, 83

Orlando, 82, 85, 166

Patrick Berry, 68

Paul, 74, 81, 85, 87

Philip Fine, 98

Puck, 83

Quixote, 85

Roger Squires (“Rufus”), 80, 87, 123

Ruth Crisp (“Crispa”), 123

Steven Sondheim, 77

Tom Driberg (“Tiresias”), 149

Tracy Gray, 170–171

Viking, 86

Virgilius, 81

whodunit mystery writers, 135–138

Crossworder’s Own Newsletter (Newman), 56

Crosswordese/crosswordiness, 43–45

“Crossword Mama You’re Puzzling Me” (song), 14

“Cross Word Papa (You Sure Puzzle Me)” (song), 14

Crossword puzzles. See also Technology, crosswording and

about origin of the name, 7

appearance of first puzzle, ix, 162

Arthur Wynne and beginning of, 28, 162

best puzzle of 21st Century, 139

creation of jargon, 20–21

development as American fad, 13–14, 154

development as British fad, 14–19

favorite crosswordy words, 45–48

judging difficulty and good taste, 147–152

learning the art, 115

Crossword puzzles (cont.)

“New Wave” movement, 56–57

patenting idea, 11–12

publishing first book, 8–10

rules over cheating, 91–96

“Cross Words Between My Sweetie and Me” (song), 13–14

Crossword solvers

assumptions and expectations of, 164–165

cheating, rules about, 91–96

computers as, 118–121

depiction as “oddballs” and “loners,” 116–117

depiction in TV and movies, 52–53, 109–112, 114, 116, 139–144

determining character and personality of, 172–173

discovering new words, 45

drug use by, 58

proving constructor wrong, 145–146

reaching “penny-drop” moment, x, 98–99, 143, 151

replacement of print, 165–169

research on cognitive skills, 97–102

resources for, 175–178

tournaments and timed play tips, 74–75, 103–108, 140

Crossword solvers (identified solutionists)

Al Sanders, 103–104, 106

Aric Egmont, 116–117

I. Cresswell, 77

John Gielgud, 95–96

Jon Stewart, 103–104

Marc Romano, 104, 107, 113–114

Mark Goodliffe, 105–106

Meredith Gardner, 125–126

Mike Mussina, 103–104, 115

Nitsuh Abebe, 144

Peter Biddlecombe, 107

Peter Brooksbank, 105

P. G. Wodehouse, 153–154

Rosalind Runcie, 150

Stanley Sedgewick, 128

Crossword solvers (notable solutionists)

Bill Clinton, 103–104

Christopher Robin, 160

Elizabeth II (queen of England), 161

Frank Sinatra, 160

George VI (king of England), 161

Indira Gandhi, 160–161

Margaret (princess), 161

Norman Mailer, 161

Thomas Keneally, 161

Crossworld: One Man’s Journey into America’s Crossword Obsession (Romano), 104, 113–114

Cruciverbalism: A Crossword Fanatic’s Guide to Life in the Grid (Newman), 177

Cryptanalysis (code-breaking), 125–132

Cryptarithm (aka alphametic), 12

Cryptic crossword (puzzle variant)

appearance of British mutation, x–xi

detrimental effects, 99

intelligence level and class distinction, 61–62

Mathers as creator, 73, 81

role of “clue,” 21

ruse of “muse,” 47

Sondheim as creator, 77–78

use of acrostic, 24–25

wartime code-breaking and, 125–126

Cryptic definition clues, 81–82

Cryptolog (magazine), 125

The Curious History of the Crosswords: 100 Puzzles from Then and Now (Tausig), 177

Cynewulf (Anglo-Saxon poet), 25

Daily Sketch (newspaper), 17

Danesi, Marcel, 25, 177

Dawe, Leonard, 130–131

Dawson, George Geoffrey, 50

“DE,” ambiguity of words ending in, 41

Dean, Roy, 161

Deductive reasoning, 172–173

Dementia, staving off the onset, x, 97–102, 158

Dexter, Colin, 137

Didion, Joan, 62

Digital online puzzles, 106

Dodimead, David, 95

Dole, Robert, 63–65, 67

Double acrostics (puzzle), 7, 21–25, 32, 86, 134, 144

Double definition clues, 80

Down

book section defined, xi

creating numbering system, 11

origin of jargon, 20–21

Drayton, Michael, 21

Dr. Fill (crossword bot), 119–121

Driberg, Tom (“Tiresias”), 149

Dr. Phil (TV show), 119

Duchamp, Marcel, 71

Egmont, Aric, 116–117

Eliot, T. S., 77

Elizabeth II (queen of England), 161

English History 1914–1915 (Taylor), 134

English language

about making game of, ix

adaptation to other languages, 49–51

exploiting ambiguity of, 40–42

favorite crosswordy words, 45–48

lending itself to crosswordiness, 43–45

The Simpsons’ contributions, 140

spoonerisms, origins of, 68–71

spoonerisms, use in writings and puzzles, 71–75

translating clues to other languages, 52–55

The Enigma (magazine), 73–74

Enigmatical Propositions, 163–164

“ER,” ambiguity of words ending in, 40–41

Esperanto (artificial language), 7

Espionage. See also Hidden answers/messages

crosswording as tool, x

intelligence-gathering by CIA, 131–132

WWII code-breaking and cryptanalysis, 125–131

Étienne, Luc, 71, 177

“Eye-Witnesses Should Not Do Cryptic Crosswords Prior to Identity Parades” (Lewis), 99

Farrar, John C., 10

Farrar, Margaret Petherbridge, 8–11, 145–146, 148

Farrar, Straus and Giroux (publisher), 11

Farrell, Jerry, 62, 64–65, 177

“The Fascinating Problem of Uncle Meleager’s Will” (Sayer), 136

Fifteensquared (crossword blog), 175

Financial Times, 34, 61–62

Fine, Philip, 98

Fitzgerald, F. Scott, 59

Flippant, Peter, 34

French language, crosswordy words, 45

French, Ronald, 130–131

The Freshman (movie), 114

Friedlander, Kathryn, 98–99, 101–102

Friends (TV series), 91

Fry, Stephen, 58, 105

Fuller, Vincent, 137

FUN

crossword puzzles as, ix–xi

inclusion in first “Word-Cross” puzzle, 7

Future developments and advances. See Technology, crosswording and

Games (magazine), 65

Gandhi, Indira, 160–161

Gardner, Meredith, 125–126

Garland, John, 137

Gee, Johnny, 177

George VI (king of England), 161

Getting Away with Murder (stage play, Sondheim), 135

Gielgud, John, 95–96

Gilbert, Val, 131

Ginis, Kathleen Martin, 100

Ginsberg, Matt, 119–120

Goodliffe, Mark, 105–106

Google Goggles (software), 118

Gower Street dialect (aka spoonerism, “gowerism”), 69–70

Graham, John (“Araucaria”), 87–88, 150–152

Gray, Tracy, 170–171

Greer, Brian, 83

Grid. See also Crossword construction

adaptation to other languages, 49–51

aesthetics and parameters, 11

appearance of, 20–21, 164

as basic unit of crossword, 31

computer-generated puzzles, 121–124

finding the ninas, 30–35

inductive reasoning and, 172–173

letter counts in language translations, 52–55

multi-dimensional formats, 169– 171

pay-to-play puzzles, 17–18

use of “crosswordy” words, 43–45

Groening, Matt, 141–142

The Guardian, 32, 57, 98, 147, 150, 175

Hall, Barbara, 121

Harvard University, 14

Harvey, Georgina, 177

Hearst, William Randolph, 4

Helmlé, Eugen, 53

Henderson, John (“Enigmatist”), 98

Hidden answers/messages. See also Espionage

creating cryptic clues, 79–88

creating themed entries, 116–117, 140–144

reaching the “penny-drop” moment, 98–99

translations into other languages, 52–55

use of acrostics, 22–27

use of a nina, 30–35

use of palindrome, 27–29

“High Stakes” (Wodehouse), 155

Hirschfeld, Al, 30

Hirschfeld, Nina, 30

The History of “Punch” (Spielmann), 24

Hollinghurst, Alan, 95

“Homer and Lisa Exchange Cross Words” (TV show), 139–144

Homer Simpson (fictional TV character), 139–144

Hook, Henry, 33

“Hooray! Hooray! Hooray! The Cross-Word Puzzle Book is out today” (Adams), 9

Hot Fuzz (movie), 142

Hotten, John, 69

Hot Water (Wodehouse), 156

“How to Do a Real Crossword Puzzle . . .” (Sondheim), 77

Humpty Dumpty, 39

Ido (artificial language), 7

The Illustrated London News, 24

Inductive reasoning, 172–173

Inspector Morse (TV series), 133, 137–138, 177

Interlocking words/squares, 11, 49, 80, 95, 163

Internet, crosswording in the Cloud, 166–167

I Say Nothing (Balfour), 175–176

James, M. R., 157

Jargon. See also Across; Clue(s); Down; Grid

about origins of, 20–21

creating ninas, 30–35

Jed Bartlet (fictional TV character), 52–53, 84

Jigsaw puzzles, 133

Johnson, Boris, 123

Journal of Experimental Psychology, 100

Keneally, Thomas, 161

Klein bottle, 169

La Littérature Potentielle: Créations, Re-créations, Récréations (Oulipo), 177

Lampkin, John, 48

Lang, Matheson, 16–17

Larkin, Philip, 77

L’Art Du Contrepet (Étienne), 177

The Last of Sheila (Sondheim), 135

La Vie mode d’emploi [Life: A User’s Manual] (Perec), 53, 55, 134

Le Livre Du Courage Et De La Peur (Renault), 177

Leo McGarry (fictional TV character), 146

Le Point (newspaper), 134

Les Mots croisés, procédés de considérations de l’auteur sur l’art et la manière de croiser les mots (Perec), 45, 176

Life: A User’s Manual [La Vie mode d’emploi] (Perec), 53, 55, 134

The Listener (newspaper), 18, 76–78, 138, 169–170

Little Ramblers (musical group), 14

London The Daily Telegraph, 18, 123, 127, 129–131, 149

London The Sunday Telegraph, 84–85

London Times

Adrian Bell as first constructor, 38

Barbara Hall as puzzle editor, 121

Crossword Championship, 34, 104–105, 150

crossword first appearance, 18–19, 77–78

crosswords as menace, 14–17

George Dawson as puzzle editor, 50

house style for puzzles, 33–34

puzzle adaptations to technology, 166–167, 169

Wodehouse as puzzle addict, 154–158

The Long Green Gaze: A Crossword Puzzle Mystery (Fuller), 137

Lord of the Rings trilogy (Tolkien), 34

Los Angeles Reader (newspaper), 141

Lottery, pay-to-play puzzles as, 17–18

Love of language, crossword puzzles as, ix

Mackail, Denis, 158

Made-up language, 7, 34

Mailer, Norman, 161

Maleska, Eugene T., 33, 46, 56–58, 65

Manley, Don, 44–45, 74

Margaret (princess of England), 161

Marital relationships, crosswording and, 52–53, 109–112, 116–117

“Marrowskies” (aka spoonerisms), 69–70

Mathers, Edward Powys (“Torquemada”), 73, 81, 134

Mazes (puzzle format), 4, 21

McElveen, George (Rev.), 14

McGraw, Phil, 119

Mental health, crosswording and, 97–102

Merrell, Patrick, 65

MI5 (British intelligence service), 129–131

Miles, Josie, 14

Millington, Roger, 176

Milne, A. A., 160

Mnemonics, 132. See also Acrostics (puzzle)

Möbius strip, 169

Monk (constructor), 34

Moor, Edward, 48

Moseley, David (“Gordius”), 57, 58

Mudd (constructor), 83, 86

Murder Across and Down (Resnicow), 137

“Murder Mystery” (puzzle), 135

Mussina, Mike, 103–104, 115

Nabokov, Vladimir, 24

Nader, Ralph, 63–64

Names, ambiguity of misleading, 41–42

The Nation, 88

National Security Agency (NSA), 125

The Neighbor’s Home Mail (newspaper), 162–164

Newman, Stanley, 56–57, 122, 177

Newsday (magazine), 56

News of the World (newspaper), 17, 31

New Wave crosswording (“the Newman ripple”), 56–57

New York Post (newspaper), 4

The New York Times

cryptic puzzles, 88

Eugene Maleska as puzzle editor, 33, 46, 56–58, 65

maintaining good taste, 148–149

Margaret Farrar as first crossword editor, 11

overlapping puzzle with The Simpsons, 139–144

puzzles expressing political views, 63–65

puzzles using slang, 58–59

reporting on faked Spoonerisms, 70

Will Shortz as puzzle editor, 57, 107, 139–141, 146–147

Will Weng as puzzle editor, 95

Wordplay blog, 177

New York World (newspaper), 4–5, 8–9, 11, 162

Ninas, 30–35

Notabili (constructor), 83

Nottingham Evening Post, 16

Obesity, crosswording and, 100

Oddities and Curiosities of Words and Literature (Bombaugh), 177

Old Testament (The Bible), 25

Olsher, Dean, 176

O’Malley, Christine, 176

Orlando (constructor), 82, 85, 166

Oulipo (Ouvroir de Littérature Potentielle), 71

The Oxford Book of English Verse, 111

The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations, 70

Oxford Guide To World Games (Augarde), 176

Palindrome, 26–28

Papalia & His Orchestra (musical group), 14

Paul (constructor), 74, 81, 85, 87

Pay-to-play puzzles, 17–18

Pearson’s Magazine, 14

“Penny-drop” moment of clarity, x, 98–99, 143, 151

The People (newspaper), 17

Perception (journal), 99

Perec, Georges, 45, 53, 134

Perkin, John, 57

Perot, Ross, 63–64

Personality, crosswording and, 172–173

Petherbridge, Margaret. See Farrar, Margaret Petherbridge

Plaza Publishing (alias for Simon & Schuster), 8

Poe, Edgar Allen, 24, 134

Politics, crosswording and, 31–32, 63–65, 87–88

Predictions, crosswords making, 63–67

“Predictors of Crossword Puzzle Proficiency and Moderators of Age-Cognition Relations” (Hambrick), 100

Pretty Girl in Crimson Rose (Balfour), 175–176

Private Eye (magazine), 149

Prostitution, crosswording and, 87–88

Puck (constructor), 83

Pulitzer, Joseph, 4

The Puzzle Instinct: The Meaning of Puzzles in Human Life (Danesi), 177

Puzzles of 1925 (musical revue), 13

Quigley, Brendan Emmett, 32, 58, 79, 114

Quixote (constructor), 85

Rathvon, Henry, 116–117

Reagan, Ronald, 65

Reagle, Merl, 141–144, 148–149

Rebuse (puzzle format), 4

Renault, Gilbert (aka Colonel Rémy), 72, 177

Resnicow, Herbert, 137

Reversal clues, 84–85

Rhombus (puzzle format), 12

Ritchie, A. F. (“Arfit”), 37–39, 83–84, 177

Robin, Christopher, 160

Romano, Marc, 104, 107, 113–114

Rosenberg, Julius and Ethel, 125–126

Rubicon (TV series), 142

Rubik’s Cube, 169

Run-DMC (music group), 59

Runny Babbit: A Billy Sook (Silverstein), 68

Sanders, Al, 104, 106

Sartre, Jean-Paul, 126

Sayer, Dorothy L., 136–137

Schuster, M. Lincoln (“Max”), 8

Schwed, Peter, 177

Secret messages. See Espionage; Hidden answers/messages

Sedgewick, Stanley, 128

75 Years of the Times Crossword, 175

Sex, crosswording and, 87, 150

Shirley (Brontë), 21

Shortz, Will, 57, 63, 64–65, 107, 139–141, 146–147

Sideways (movie), 109

The Silent World of Nicholas Quinn (Dexter), 138

Silverstein, Shel, 68

Simon & Schuster, Inc. (publisher), 8–10

Simon, Richard L. (“Dick”), 8

The Simpsons (TV series), x, 6–7, 139–144

Sinatra, Frank, 160

A Six-Letter Word for Death (Moyes), 137

Smith, Michael, 177

Solutionists, 11

Something Fishy (Wodehouse), 159

Sondheim, Stephen, 76–78, 125, 135

Soundalike clues, 85–86

“Sound Thinking” (game), 167

The Spectator (newspaper), 18

Spielmann, Marion, 24

Spooner, Archibald [“the Spoo”] (Rev.), 69–70, 74

Spoonergram, 73–74

Spoonerisms, 7, 68–75

Spying. See Espionage

From Square One: A Meditation, with Digressions, on Crosswords (Olsher), 176

Squires, Roger (“Rufus”), 80, 87, 123

Station X: The Codebreakers of Bletchley Park (Smith), 177

Stenography, 8

Stewart, Jon, 103–104

“Sticky Wickets at Blandings” (Wodehouse), 158

Still Life (stage play), 109

The Strand Magazine, 155

The Strange World of the Crossword (Millington), 176

Sudokus, 51, 100, 101, 167

Suffolk Words and Phrases: or, An Attempt to Collect the Lingual Localisms of That County (Moor), 48

Sugarhill Gang (music group), 59

Summer Moonshine (Wodehouse), 153–154

Sunday Graphic (newspaper), 17

The Swimming-Pool Library (Hollinghurst), 95

Sybil (Erythraean prophetess), 24

Synonyms, 15–16, 51, 58, 85–86, 93, 101, 121

Tabourot, Étienne, 26

Tamsworth Herald, 15

Tausig, Ben, 177

Taylor, A. J. P., 134

Teamwork/team spirit, crosswording and, 114–116

Technology, crosswording and

about future of, 164–168

crossword construction, 121–124

crossword solving, 119–121

digital online puzzles, 106

multi-dimensional formats, 169–171

replacement of print, 168–169

sudoku-solving, 118–119

wartime code-breaking, 128–129

Telegraph Six,” 123

Telekinesis puzzle, 62, 66, 178

“The Riddler: Meet the Marquis de Sade of the Puzzle World” (Jerz), 177

With This Puzzle, I Thee Kill (Hall), 137

Times Crossword Championship, 34, 104–105, 150

Times for the Times (crossword blog), 175

Timeshift: How to Solve a Cryptic Crossword (film documentary), 177

“Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius” (Borges), 55

Tolkien, J. R. R., 34

The Torquemada Puzzle Book (Mathers), 73

Tournaments and Championships

American Crossword Puzzle Tournament, 74–75, 103–104, 106–108, 119–121

“Citywide Crossword Tournament,” 140

Times Crossword Championship, 34, 104–105, 150

U.S. Open Crossword Puzzle Championship, 167

Translations

differing letter counts, 52–55

multiple meanings of English words, 49–51

“The Truth About George” (Wodehouse), 155

Turning the Pages: An Insider’s Story of Simon & Schuster 1924–1984 (Schwed), 177

The Two Ronnies (TV show), 73

U.S. Open Crossword Puzzle Championship, 167

“The Vane Sisters” (Nabokov), 24

Veltman, Noah, 43–44

The Victorians (Wilson), 134

Victoria (queen of England), 22–23

Virgilius (constructor), 81

Vowels

as nicknames, slang, and formulas, 58

words starting and ending with, 43–44, 46

words without, 47

The Wall Street Journal, 88

Weng, Will, 95

Westbrook, Eric, 168–169

West Side Story (Broadway musical), 76

The West Wing (TV series), x, 52–53, 146

Wheen, Francis, 149

White, F. D., 11

Whodunit mystery novels, crosswords and, 133–138

Why Didn’t They Ask Evans? (Christie), 136

Wilson, A. N., 134

Wodehouse, P. G. (“Plum”), 46, 148, 153–159

Woolf, Virginia, 77

“Word-Cross,” 7, 28, 162

Word diamond (puzzle format), 28

Wordplay (film documentary), 103–104, 106, 115, 139, 176

Wordplay (New York Times blog), 141–142, 177

Word search (puzzle format), 4, 51

Word square (puzzle format), 4–6, 27–29

Workshop of Potential Literature (Oulipo), 71

The World (newspaper), 4–5, 8–9, 11, 162

World War I, 20, 127

World War II, 125–131, 157–158

Wynne, Arthur

about origins of “Word-Cross,” 3–7, 28, 162

failure to patent idea, 11–12

solution to first puzzle, 178

Yale University, 14

The Year of Magical Thinking (Didion), 62

You Have the Right to Remain Puzzled (Hall), 137