Clues and Grid by Soup
Theme: Eightsome reels
The winner of the November puzzle is Dannish Babar of Sheffield.
Review of the November 2024 3D crossword
This month’s offering differs in many respects from the usual 3D calendar format — no obvious theme, no serpents, no differently coloured cells, every solution of eight letters, no historical anniversary to research, and an unconventional grid. So, what do we have?
Perhaps the background photograph, with its multiple spools of thread, is a cheekily cryptic pointer to the ‘Eightsome Reels’ specials that solvers of the Azed series in the Observer newspaper will recognise. I have always admired the ability of setters to compile these puzzles with solutions that overlap partially, but what Soup has achieved here, through adding a third dimension to the overlapping, is nothing short of a tour de force of crossword construction. That he has managed this without a single obscure answer only adds to my admiration.
To solvers that are unfamiliar with this format, it can be frustrating that many clues have to be solved ‘cold’ before their solutions can be entered in the grid. However, the alphabetical order of the clues adds substantially to their solvability and Soup uses a generous helping of anagrams to support the solver along the way. Of the 34 clues, ten include either full, partial or composite anagrams. My favourites of the latter were for GARROTTE, HOARDERS and PARASOLS.
In a 2021 interview for the Guardian, Soup reveals the derivation of his unusual pseudonym and describes what makes a successful clue as: “pith, and ideally, but not always, humour. Good grammar on the surface and within the cryptic reading; a surface that has nothing to do with the solution.” The longer solution word lengths here allow him to exploit those principles to a tee, or, as in his clue to DEFTNESS, to ‘show his elegant skill’. Highlights for this reviewer were: a lovely pun for PERSPIRE (allocations ‘per spire’); a clever deletion for REMOVERS (to crates for Cate); two mathematical references — Soup is a scientist in his ‘real’ job — COSINESS (Luxury function on ship) and PIONEERS (They found …); and a laugh-out-loud clue to HARASSED (Pestered one with big ears to cuddle another on date).
Altogether, then, triple thanks to Soup this month, not only for a ground-breaking grid and an innovative format, but also for a puzzle with clueing of the highest quality.
KM
Grid solution
Visual clue
Some mental visual and verbal gymnastics are needed for this succinct clue. The letters OM appear with the end snipped off, which you could say is ‘MO almost in reverse’, whose wordplay gives us:
MO in REVERS(e) = REMOVERS
Clues and explanations
Day | Solution | Direction, Clue, Count | Explanation |
---|---|---|---|
1 | AERATION | 25 Change lieutenant, missing bubbliness | A(lt)ERATION |
2 | ARRANGER | 5 Arkansas park-keeper is one who works out | AR RANGER |
3 | BERATING | 6 Gutted, Edgar went inside, softening telling off | B<E(dga)R>ATING |
4 | CHARRING | 15 Cleaning what’s left from burning hoop | CHAR RING |
5 | CONTORTS | 1 Screws up on the return trip, coming in last? Rot — no contest! | Hidden rev |
6 | COSINESS | 19 Luxury function on ship | COSINE SS |
7 | COVERING | 17 6 balls batting in MCG — opener dismissed putting in a guard | (m)C<OVER IN>G |
8 | DEFTNESS | 23 Definition leads to the next entry — Soup shows elegant skill | DEF + acrostic |
9 | DIRENESS | 9 Is sender mistaken in urgency? | IS SENDER* |
10 | FLATNESS | 31 Tart Daly from Strictly wiggling belly, showing boredom | FLAN TESS with swapped middle |
11 | FLYOVERS | 16 Fry loves display at which aircraft pay tribute | FRY LOVES* |
12 | GARROTTE | 2 Interrogator, removing a couple of layers, used vicious device | (in)TERROGAT(or)* |
13 | HARASSED | 30 Pestered one with big ears to cuddle another on date | HAR<ASS>E D |
14 | HERITAGE | 21 Their age represented tradition and history | THEIRAGE* |
15 | HOARDERS | 13 They keep drayhorse working, at last ready to drop | DRA(y)HORSE* |
16 | HOLINESS | 27 Perfection that’s a characteristic of Swiss cheese | dd |
17 | IGNITION | 33 The key part of a car | cd |
18 | MERITING | 29 I withheld script, deserving a reward | ME (w)RITING |
19 | NEGATING | 3 Opposing Nursery End openers facing former England captain after time out | NE GAT(t)ING |
20 | ORDERING | 14 Laying out, being close to going topless | (b)ORDERING |
21 | PARASOLS | 34 They shade Passiflora if pruned and trained | PASS(if)LORA* |
22 | PERSPIRE | 8 As one might do after working out how to apportion allocations to churches? | PER SPIRE |
23 | PIONEERS | 11 They found 3.14 + 1 + 2.718 after exhausting researches | PI ONE E R(esearche)S |
24 | REFINERS | 7 Their cleansing processes make dirty foreigners unhappily go away | FOREIGNERS* less GO* |
25 | REMOVERS | 32 Might they do this to crates for Cate? | Remove R S |
26 | RENTIERS | 10 Terrines prepared for professional landlords | TERRINES* |
27 | REORDERS | 28 Again demands anagrams | Dd |
28 | SHINGLES | 22 He slings spinning wooden tiles | HESLINGS* |
29 | SLOSHING | 26 Striking longships, taking out aft of poop with a crash | LONGSHI(p)S |
30 | SOLENOID | 12 Relay makes footballer Campbell audibly cross | SOL ANNOYED hom |
31 | SPARRING | 18 Arguing with convenience-store cartel | SPAR RING |
32 | STRANDED | 4 By London street, enamoured, gut-punched, helpless … | STRAND E(namoura)D |
33 | STRANGER | 24 … with love for a more rugged new arrival | STR[o->a]NGER |
34 | TROTTERS | 20 Peckhamites’ revolutionary brief cut back | TROT TERS(e) Ref. Only Fools and Horses |
Solvers’ comments
Found this rather hard going, needed to solve a lot of the clues before I could tentatively pencil in some answers. Even getting the last couple of answers was not straightforward despite having most of the letters. Thanks to Soup for an excellent challenge and for amending eightsome reels into a 3d puzzle. [GW]
One of the most challenging 3D’s I’ve done. x [RE]
Wonderful clues, amazing construction! [AJ]
Loved it [LA]
The last clue we solved was 8 (day 22)—and getting this puzzle done did indeed cause some perspiration. An absolute crime scene of scribbles resulted as we worked out how the grid needed to be filled! A beautiful crossword, bravo. [RS]
An interesting variation in 3D. I suppose the extra checking meant the preponderance of common elements like ERS and ING. 18 puzzling wordplay 23 “after” = “then”, rather than “after”? 30 I wouldn’t say a solenoid is a relay, though maybe it could be used as such. 34 “cut back” = “cut”, rather than “cut” + “back”? [MJ]
Excellent variation of Eightsome Reels. [RG]
Ingenious variation on a 3d puzzle. As a lot of the answers necessarily shared common endings (-tion, -ing, -ness, -ers), it was probably easier to solve than it must have been to set. Some wonderfully cheeky clues, particularly days 10, 16 and 22. Thank you. [JT]
I always look forward to Azed’s Eightsome Reels puzzles, so I was delighted that Soup had constructed a 3-D version of this format. What a treat! [NI]
I rather enjoyed that. The constraints of the grid were used very well. Most clues were straightforward which helped, but perhaps a few too many missing letter anagrams. I enjoyed days 22, 23 and 8. The day 10 clue makes me uncomfortable: it’s very clever, but does that make it OK to use a surface reading that calls a woman a tart? I don’t think it does. [DR]
Liked the circular entry gimmick — even more fun in 3D than in 2D! [TH]
An interesting and welcome challenge. [RP]
I was very pleased to eventually untangle this one (I think). I am still not sure that I have got the clockwise and anticlockwise numbers sorted. Many thanks to Soup for the tough but fair challenge. [JA]
Wow, it must have been really tricky making up this grid! The layout did help me solve some I wasn’t sure of, though. Some fun clues, I especially liked the one for day 22. Thanks Soup for an unusual puzzle. [RS]
Done this sort of puzzle before (though some time ago) but only in 2D. This was good fun, but (as is often the case for me with visualiasation) it needed some care and attention. Several clues brought broad smiles and I particularly liked REMOVERS and the groaner SOLENOID. Thanks Soup. [CW]
Wow, impressive grid, made me cross-eyed trying to fit the letters in. Satisfying parsing with enough straightforward clues to get us on the grid. [J&JH]
Seemed quite strange to have no anniversary connection this month, just the ‘interwoven words’ challenge (I assume that’s what the picture refers to). It was good fun once the first few fell into place, more by lucky guesswork than anything else, and my brain adjusted to the multi-directional contortions. Thereafter there were so many overlapping letters of words with limited possibilites that it yielded quite easily. I wonder if it would have been almost unsolvable without the first two to get us started…. but thank you, Soup (timely, since it is also the start of home made soup season!) [MS]
I am generally in awe of you amazing people who can construct a 3D crossword, but this is particularly impressive. Enjoyed solving this a lot! [DB]
This seemed rather daunting at first – a 3D ‘Eightsome Reel’? Can’t say I’ve seen one of these before…! But, as with the 2D ones, once you get a couple of adjacent solutions, in my case 2 and 5, then they give a helping hand with the neighbouring ones and so on, in a virtuous circle, if you excuse the pun. The vertical ones caused a bit of brain contortion, but it all fell into place quite neatly in the end. My favourite was probably 30 HARASSED, with the mental image of a hare and an ass cuddling each other on a date! Many thanks to Soup for a ‘soup-er’ puzzle… [MC]
I enjoyed this – the right level of difficulty for me in the cryptic clues themselves, only one unfamiliar word (RENTIERS) and all seemed really fairly clued, so could unravel the harder ones with a bit of thought – perfect. Laughed at Day 10. Found the grid a challenge to understand, but got there in the end. Probably my favourite puzzle of this calendar so many thanks to Soup . I still don’t understand the picture clue even knowing the answer, but I never seem to get them so not letting it spoil my enjoyment! Look forward to more 🙂 [JC]
Reading the instructions filled me with horror but it actually turned out alright, an enjoyable satisfying workout. Souper. [SC]
Fiendish indeed, but after trying one way, and realising it had to be the other way, the clues started to fit into place very elegantly. [SB]
Unusually, this puzzle lacked an external theme, but there was much to admire in the closely interwoven design. It must have been challenging to the setter to work to such a high ratio of checked letters for the answers but still set a challenge to the solver to solve enough clues to get toeholds in the grid that would assist with the trickier clues (of which TROTTERS was, for me, the trickiest). I managed to work out the picture clue this time – a rare feat and treat for me! [AB]
Really interesting use of the 3d grid.[MD]
What an amazing construction. I’m glad I didn’t leave it until the last minute as I found it hard. Some lovely cluing especially day 23 Pioneers. [PD]
The ring entry was an interesting challenge to get your head round! Good range of solutions, all well clued. [JP]
It took me ages to get a handle on this, but once alles klar, a very satisfying challenge! [SF]
Well, that makes a change! Reading the rubric, I wasn’t sure I was going to fully understand what to do, but getting a few interlocking clues pointed to a way forward. Happy to see more like this. [PA]
I liked it. 😎 Took too long to see Sloshing! [DM]
Brilliant achievement by Soup to create such a grid. Mostly with familiar words too, although I had trouble parsing quite a few answers. Thanks very much for a fun challenge. [BS]
This took quite a while to sort out how the entries went in, but once I realised, then it was an enjoyable challenge. Some clever clues here! Thank you Soup for something a bit different. [SB]
I thought I would never be able to fill in the grid but when I’d got all the answers it was easy and I found some answers weren’t quite right. [SG]
I must admit that I don’t really enjoy the puzzles where answers can’t be put in the grid on solving. I almost gave up completely with this one and would have done if I’d had to get to grips with entering the answers, in order to submit a solution. Nevertheless, some of the individual clues gave a satisfying solve…..days 2, 7 and 16 for example. [JB]
I’ve just pulled all my hair out!😩 Nuff said!😵💫 [MN]
Puzzle of the year. I like the entry system a lot, and the fact that letters are checked in more ways than usual. [AB]
I liked the cluing. Filling in the grid became tiresome at one point. All the cricket references make solving difficult if not brought up with the game. Thanks to Soup! [JS]
Well, I’m pleased to see that people completed it and enjoyed it – I was wondering if the comments here would be filled with haters!
It was fun to set. For those who think I’m some kind of magician, I did *not* do this by hand – that would be utter insanity. Instead, I used a wonderful computer program called QXW, which lets me program in grids and constraints and then provides potential fills for me. It took me a good couple of hours to program this one in; I always try it with a big word list first because if it doesn’t work with that it won’t work with a ‘standard’ word list of about 50,000 words; I don’t use the big word list for the final puzzle because it includes too many obscure things. (I prefer a puzzle to only include words I know already myself, but allow myself one or maybe two new ones (RENTIERS, in this case) – I feel that’s fair on the solver.)
Is using a computer program to set puzzles like this ‘cheating’? I don’t think so. For me, the fun is having the idea in the first place and constructing it in whatever way possible, not proving ‘how clever I am’ by doing it by hand.
Thanks all for the kind words, to the hints and tips people for their pointers (particularly Nick, for going *way* above and beyond the call of duty by producing a how-to document!). No eightsome from me next year (indeed, no grid, only clues – I was a bit busy), but I hope to do a grid and clues for 2026.
Hamish/Soup
PS: DR, Re your comment about 10 – looking at this again, I agree with you. I don’t usually do clues like this so I’m not sure what was going on there. I think perhaps I was thinking of ‘tart’ as an adjective, but I couldn’t say for sure.
Thank you to everyone for their overwhelmingly appreciative comments. I thought the concept and execution by Soup were top class, as ever. The point is well made by our Reviewer that some clues had to be solved in isolation before any help from what are usually called “crossers” – here, perhaps, “shared tangents”? – became available. With an Alphabetical Jigsaw set as December’s puzzle, the same additional challenge will exist. I hope that solvers like something to stretch them at this time of the year, with long dark evenings and (as MS points out) hot and comforting food as an accompaniment or reward.
To reply to DR about 10: two years ago I asked the question myself whether the clue was permissible (whether or not Soup’s tentative explanation holds). The team consensus view was that since words in a cryptic clue are never designed to be taken at face value, it was OK. However, I would not now put through a clue with a similar surface reading; and I would emphasise here that certainly no pejorative reflection on the person concerned was intended.
Thanks for the replies about 10 and I am pleased that you feel such a clue would not be published now.