This puzzle is one of the success stories of the editing process, so I owe extra thanks to Will for this one, for having both high ...
read moreThis puzzle is one of the success stories of the editing process, so I owe extra thanks to Will for this one, for having both high standards and patience with constructors.
Back in 2015, I'd built a puzzle around the same pair of 15-letter seeds (which may speak a little to their pairing: I was starting to write this puzzle just as Obergefell v. Hodges was being decided — plus I'm a computer science faculty member, so I was particularly drawn to the second of the two long entries). I had managed to include a bunch of other longer entries that I liked a lot (SPARKPLUG, HARPER LEE, ITS SO EASY, ...), but, as the rejection note from Will and Joel said, there were too many ugly short entries that "start to add up after a while to make for unpleasant solving." That's always a tendency that I have to fight when I'm filling puzzles: I tend to overvalue what I consider to be awesome long entries and fail to pay enough attention to the costly short junk that they induce.
I got similar feedback from some other editors at other venues, and so, begrudgingly, I put the puzzle away in my (overstuffed) filing drawer of rejections.
But I kept finding myself compelled by this pair of 15s, and so I pulled it back out a couple of years later. In short, I moved a couple of black squares around, refilled again from scratch, reclued it all, and submitted a new version. A good portion of the NW corner (my favorite portion of the 2015 version) stayed intact from attempt #1 to attempt #2, and OVINES survived (but migrated in the grid); save those pieces and the 15s, everything else was brand new.
And here's the result. Hope you enjoy it — and, even if you don't, I hope you appreciate that the version you didn't see was a lot worse!