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Crossworld: One Man's Journey into America's Crossword Obsession
 
 
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Crossworld: One Man's Journey into America's Crossword Obsession [Paperback]

Marc Romano (Author)
3.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (25 customer reviews)

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Book Description

June 13, 2006
Sixty-four million people do it at least once a week. Nabokov wrote about it. Bill Clinton even did it in the White House. The crossword puzzle has arguably been our national obsession since its birth almost a century ago. Now, in Crossworld, writer, translator, and lifelong puzzler Marc Romano goes where no Number 2 pencil has gone before, as he delves into the minds of the world’s cleverest crossword creators and puzzlers, and sets out on his own quest to join their ranks.

While covering the American Crossword Puzzle Tournament for the Boston Globe, Romano was amazed by the skill of the competitors and astonished by the cast of characters he came across—like Will Shortz, beloved editor of the New York Times puzzle and the only academically accredited “enigmatologist” (puzzle scholar); Stanley Newman, Newsday’s puzzle editor and the fastest solver in the world; and Brendan Emmett Quigley, the wickedly gifted puzzle constructer and the Virgil to Marc’s Dante in his travels through the crossword inferno.

Chronicling his own journey into the world of puzzling—even providing tips on how to improve crosswording skills—Romano tells the story of crosswords and word puzzles themselves, and of the colorful people who make them, solve them, and occasionally become consumed by them.

But saying this is a book about puzzles is to tell only half the story. It is also an explanation into what crosswords tell us about ourselves—about the world we live in, the cultures that nurture us, and the different ways we think and learn. If you’re a puzzler, Crossworld will enthrall you. If you have no idea why your spouse send so much time filling letters into little white squares, Crossworld will tell you – and with luck, save your marriage.


CROSSWORLD | by Marc Romano

ACROSS
1. I am hopelessly addicted to the New York Times crossword puzzle.
2. Like many addicts, I was reluctant to admit I have a problem.
3. The hints I was heading for trouble came, at first, only occasionally.
4. The moments of panic when I realized that I might not get my fix on a given day.
5. The toll on relationships.
6. The strained friendships.
7. The lost hours I could have used to do something more productive.
8. It gets worse, too.

DOWN
1. You’re not just playing a game.
2. You’re constantly broadening your intellectual horizons.
3. You spend a lot of time looking at and learning about the world around you.
4. You have to if you want to develop the accumulated store of factual information you’ll need to get through a crossword puzzle.
5. Puzzle people are nice because they have to be.
6. The more you know about the world, the more you tend to give all things in it the benefit of the doubt before deciding if you like them or not.
7. I’m not saying that all crossword lovers are honest folk dripping with goodness.
8. I would say, though, that if I had to toss my keys and wallet to someone before jumping off a pier to save a drowning girl, I’d look for the fellow in the crowd with the daily crossword in his hand.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

With wit and verve, puzzle devotee Romano offers a bird's-eye view of the arena of crossword addicts, combining basic information with engaging anecdotes about those who populate this intense, competitive corner of the universe. Today it's the New York Times puzzle that poses the ultimate challenge (or frustration) for many. But, Romano relates, the first crossword appeared in the New York World in 1913, sparking a craze that swept across the nation during the 1920s. The author provides a detailed history of this American sensation (as well as a comparison with the British counterpart, cryptics). Once a year, Will Shortz, the New York Times's crossword editor, responsible for elevating the difficulty of the papers' puzzles, hosts the American Crossword Puzzle Tournament in Stamford, Conn. Romano competed there and provides a consistently entertaining account of several extremely skillful and quirky puzzle solvers; he interviews Shortz and Brendan Emmett Quigley, an outstanding puzzle constructor against whom the author pitted his skill. Clearly infatuated with his hobby, Romano claims, not entirely tongue-in-cheek, that solving crosswords can help make you into a "better, more informed, fairer, and more tolerant person." Agent, Jim Auth at the Wylie Agency.(On sale June 1) --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

From The New Yorker

Sixty-four million people do at least one crossword a week. This book, a memoir chronicling Romano's yearlong immersion in the world of competitive crossword puzzles, is written for those who do them religiously. Sketching the history of crosswords, Romano explains that this kind of wordplay has been around since the ancient Greeks created word squares, but the game itself was invented by an American newspaperman in 1913. Romano enters the subculture of the game's hardcore enthusiasts and attends the American Crossword Puzzle Tournament. He provides tips for puzzlers and insights into a crossword's construction. Ultimately, the book is a celebration of an addiction. For Romano, a crossword puzzle isn't just a game: "Solving puzzles is an active step you can take to make yourself a better, more informed, fairer, and more tolerant person."
Copyright © 2005 The New Yorker --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 272 pages
  • Publisher: Broadway (June 13, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0767917588
  • ISBN-13: 978-0767917582
  • Product Dimensions: 5.5 x 0.5 x 8.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (25 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,428,401 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

25 Reviews
5 star:
 (3)
4 star:
 (6)
3 star:
 (8)
2 star:
 (7)
1 star:
 (1)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.1 out of 5 stars (25 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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41 of 42 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Far Less Interesting Than It Should Have Been, June 28, 2005
By 
Steve Koss (New York, NY United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
It seems that the wonderfully touching and insightful National Spelling Bee documentary SPELLBOUND has opened the floodgates for literary variants: COUNTDOWN (about young math whizzes), WORD FREAKS (about Scrabble), and Marc Romano's CROSSWORLD (about crossword puzzling). Exploring these peculiar talents and (occasionally) obsessions, and the personalities of those who partake of them, is a meritorious notion, prospectively opening windows into small but almost savant-like niches of human behavior. One might pick up any of these books expecting to be introduced to some of the people who exhibit these extraordinary talents. In the case of CROSSWORLD, however, Romano tells us far more about himself than we care to know and far less than we want to know about the world's best cruciverbalists, or crossword puzzle solvers.

CROSSWORLD centers on author Romano's first-time participation in March, 2004 in the annual American Crossword Puzzle Tournament, held every year in Stamford, CT. Along with the requisite history lesson in crosswording and discussion about the differences between American style crosswords and British style cryptics, the author describes how he prepared himself as a contestant. Romano is fairly successful at the event itself, but he focuses far more on the people who construct and edit puzzles (Eugene Maleska, Will Shortz, Brendan Quigley, Michael Shteyman) than on the collection of people who bothered traveling to Stamford and giving up an entire weekend to solve crosswords against the clock and each other. We learn something about Shortz and Quigley, but that's about as far as Romano takes us. As for the 500-odd participants in the contest, the author blithely assures us that they are mostly introverts, mostly white, scrupulously honest, unhealthily consumed by puzzling, and just all-around nice people. As human insights go, these are remarkably trite. Romano apparently decided he was far more interesting than anyone else at the contest. We learn about his dating habits, his drinking habits, his use of Ativan to calm himself into a semi-hallucinatory state, and an off-base story about how his puzzling skills helped him acquire "a new bedmate." What should have been a fascinating account of crosswording aficionados ends up being mostly the author's stargazing at New York Times puzzle editor Will Shortz and navel-gazing over his own skills.

One other aspect of CROSSWORLD bears comment: Romano writes like someone with ADD. Every page is filled with three or four parenthetical asides, some of them full paragraph length, that are both distracting and annoying. Any writer who needs twin parentheses that often either lacks focus or is simply forcing too much extraneous information into the text. Additionally, the author seems so unsure of his own effectiveness as a writer, he constantly places explicit reminders of things he said earlier in his story. He also presents a weakly speculative, pop evolutionary psychology analysis of puzzling and problem solving that involves cavemen, tigers, and being able to spot a tiger lurking at "the sun-dappled forest edge."

Curiously, for a subject matter as precise and nit-picking as crosswords, Romano seems a bit loose with his facts. He attributes the notion of England and America being two nations divided by a common language to Winston Churchill rather than either Oscar Wilde or George Bernard Shaw (both of whom predated Churchill on this notion, Wilde by 50 years). He also mentions taking the #5 line in New York to Canal Street (New Yorkers know that only the #6 IRT line stops at Chinatown) and comments that Susan Lucci failed "something like a dozen times" to win a daytime Emmy (the actual number was eighteen before she finally won in 1999).

By the end of CROSSWORLD, Romano has clearly gotten carried away with his subject matter, trying to inflate it into much more than it is. If only we taught crosswording to university students, he argues, the world would have no more wars. "The more your mind is filled with real facts about the real world,...the less room there will be in your heart for hatred." He obviously ignored Brendan Quigley's admonition earlier in the book: "...you're talking about crossword puzzles. It's really not that complicated. They're just games." About the kindest thing one can say about CROSSWORLD is that it manages to be modestly interesting despite its author's persistent intrusions into his own material.


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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Enjoyable but too solipsistic, July 5, 2005
By 
Tinmanic (New York, NY) - See all my reviews
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As an avid crossworld solver, I was glad to read this book. It's not perfect -- Romano spends far too much time on himself, and particularly on his libido; I could have done without the "bedmate" story and all the ogling. It makes me wonder who his target audience is. But Romano's a clever writer, and it was nice to get some insight into New York Times crossword editor Will Shortz and superstar constructor Brendan Emmett Quigley.

I have a stupid nitpick. On pages 69-70, Romano writes: "Like Judge Black's definition of pornography, you'll know these when you see them." There are three mistakes there. One, the famous quote was by Stewart, not Black. Two, it's "Justice," not "Judge." Three, the quote was about obscenity, not pornography (there's a difference). As another reviewer points out, it seems strange to see such errors in a book about people who supposedly pay such close attention to detail.
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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars I was disappointed., July 10, 2005
I am crazy for crossword puzzles, so I couldn't believe my eyes when I saw this book in the bookstore. I was expecting something similar to Fatsis' WORD FREAK, but in the end I was pretty disappointed and wasn't able to finish the book.

Overall, it lacked the kind of suspense and humor I was hoping for. It seemed to take place in the author's head (rather than putting the focus on the competitors), and there were many odd digressions that detracted from the storytelling. I also found the author made a lot of peculiar word choices and he frequently structured sentences in a way that made them hard to follow.

That said, it was very interesting to learn about the history of crossworld puzzles, and to read about the life of Will Shortz. Incidentally, I thought long and hard about whether or not to post this review, because I am also an author (two moderately successful novels to my name, with another on the way), and it really stinks to read criticism on your own Amazon.com page. But in the end I decided to post, because this book was so vastly different from what I'd expected, and that's unusual for me.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
fifth puzzle, crossword puzzle tournament, crossword constructor, cryptic puzzle, puzzle editor
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Will Shortz, New York Times, American Crossword Puzzle Tournament, Stamford Marriott, World War, Brendan Quigley, Grand Ballroom, Jon Delfin, Brendan Emmett Quigley, Phaistos Disk, Peter Gordon, Stanley Newman, United States, Boston Globe, Crime of the Crossword, Wall Street, Michael Shteyman, Bob Klahn, Katherine Bryant, Sunday Times, Arthur Wynne, Times of London, Simon Schuster, Frank Longo, Daily Telegraph
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