Inquisitor 1368: Off and On by Nutmeg
Nutmeg‘s “Any other Name” came equal fourth in 2014, and her puzzles rank among my personal favourites. A small grid: 11×11. …
A test area for 15squared
Nutmeg‘s “Any other Name” came equal fourth in 2014, and her puzzles rank among my personal favourites. A small grid: 11×11. …
Preamble: To compensate for the loss of half of the clues, the editor has inserted (in an appropriate order) an extra letter …
From John Henderson (Nimrod et al) … I’ll get me ’at Inquisitor solvers, it seems, are a perverse bunch. For the second …
This blog will be the first one to appear in 2015, so a Happy New Year to all our solvers. We bloggers …
It’s a while since I blogged one of Phi‘s puzzles. And before I start, let me wish everyone a happy festive season …
After the horrors of 1309, (still unfinished at the time of writing) we were hoping for something a little more simple this …
Following recent feedback, the editor has asked me to let you know that, as from tomorrow, this puzzle will appear on the …
The preamble for this puzzle by Nimrod stated that "Yes, in one case (enemy repulsed); no, in another (enemy just maybe appropriately …
Schadenfreude for me again … and another highly asymmetric grid (with a large number of clues). “18 misprinted …
Preamble: Sixteen cells in the completed grid, forming three interconnected straight lines, spell out a work (without its definite articles) and its …
A new setter this week, welcome Wan. The rubric was “Twelve clues contain a thematic object which must be discarded before solving. …
The preamble for this puzzle by Nimrod (John Henderson, editor of the Inquisitor series and prolific crossword compiler for all of the …