How many distinct entries can you make using the starting trigram of CAR? At least twelve, as it turns out! David provides them all in ...
read moreHow many distinct entries can you make using the starting trigram of CAR? At least twelve, as it turns out! David provides them all in a ROUNDABOUT ROUTE. For example, 5-Down can produce CAR(PETS), CAR(ETS), and CAR(DING), depending on which exit you take.
The paths confused me — wouldn't you pick up all the letters as you go, like CAR(DING) should follow the path of CAR+P+E+DING as you drive around the black square?
Then I figured, this American DING-a-ling should stop CAR+P+ING, given that we're still stuck in the stone ages with ridiculous four-way stops.
Neat how David applied symmetry, two CARs appearing forward, and two backward as RAC. That further accentuated the ROUNDABOUT nature of the theme.
Cool that several entries had to appear in the grid as regular words. The PETS in CAR(PETS) shows up as STEP, while in the upper right corner, both TONS in CAR(TONS) and OMED in CAR(OMED) innocuously show up as SNOT and DEMO. Elegant touch to have nothing (except RAC) give away the game.
It's so difficult gridding around four-part themers, and when they're short, that means that your fill must be long — to stay under the 78-word minimum, something has to be long. Brilliant fill, so much SANTA HAT, ANGELINA's clever etymology clue, DERELICT, SUNK COSTS … David was not at all SITting ONE OUT. AMBROSIA to my ears.
Not picking up all the letters around the ROUNDABOUTs still bugs me. Still, there is something insidery about how CAR(DING) cuts the corner, just like some annoying drivers do around our lone neighborhood ROUNDABOUT. Don't get me started on the guy who drives straight over it in his SUV — CAR(OMED) is right!