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Fun in All Directions
September/October 2011
by Carole Bass ’83, ’97MSL
Constructing a crossword puzzle, says Yale senior
Oliver Hill, is a lot like writing a pop song. By his 21st birthday this
summer, Hill had already published 16 puzzles in the New York Times. If that’s a predictor of his musical success, well, keep your ears open for his
band, Plume Giant.
A music major raised on classical violin, Hill says
that in the cases of both puzzle-building and songwriting, “it’s more of an art
than a science. The very seedling of making it is purely creative—you have to
come up with a theme. Then there is a plug-and-chug element of finding the
rhymes” to complete a song’s lyrics, or, in a crossword, “filling the white
squares with letters that are fun in all directions.”
Everyone loves a clever theme. But Hill puts equal
emphasis on the rest of the grid, which is sometimes treated as filler. “You
don’t want to put in, like, the name of a genus of squirrels, where people say,
‘What the hell is that?’ That’s no fun.” Instead, he shoots for “anything that
has a sensory connection, like snap peas. Or ‘Hey Jude’: you fill it in and
then you’re singing the tune. It’s those answers that make a puzzle fun to
solve.”
As a constructor, Hill also delights in “the science”
of making it all fit together. “It’s kind of like doing a problem set for a
physics class,” he says: “a really fun employment of a couple different parts
of my brain. And addictive.”
The addiction—when he’s working on puzzles, it’s for
“no less than 5 hours at a time, and usually 30 hours or something over the
course of a week”—began in Hill’s mid-teens. He starting solving crosswords
with his dad, then fooled around with making his own. One day, listening to
NPR, he heard an interview with “a personal hero,” Times crossword editor Will Shortz.
“He made an offhanded reference to living in
Pleasantville, New York”—Hill’s hometown. “So I looked him up and, lo and
behold, he lives like 12 houses away from me. So I shot him an e-mail. I
thought he’d be a big shot. But he was way psyched that there was a 15-year-old
from his town who was into crosswords. When I knocked on his door and gave him
a crossword, it was the first time he had accepted one in person.”
Accepted as in received, that is: “The first one I gave
him was total crap,” Hill concedes. It took “probably six months” until he
produced one that Shortz wanted to publish.
The Internet is rife with crossword-constructing
software. One program boasts that “most puzzles for the New
York Times and other publications are made” with its help. But young
Hill is old school.
“It seems a little bit like a computer writing a song,”
he says. “It could do it, but I can’t imagine it’s going to be as good.”  |