Who Authored The Poetry Contest Crossword Clue Prompt?

2026-02-03 20:02:04 215
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3 Answers

Ryder
Ryder
2026-02-07 01:45:58
If I had to bet, the short and boring-but-handy truth is this: the person who authored the crossword clue that reads something like 'poetry Contest' is usually the constructor who built that particular puzzle. I’m the kind of puzzle nerd who flips to the byline first thing — many puzzles have the constructor’s name on them, and that’s the credit for creating both the grid and most of the initial clueing. That said, clues often get edited after submission. Editors can tinker with wording, change difficulty, or even swap out a clue entirely, so the exact phrasing you saw might be the editor’s touch rather than the constructor’s original wording.

I’ve tracked down a few of these before by checking the puzzle’s metadata or the web page where it’s hosted. Syndicated puzzles sometimes list the constructor and the syndicate editor; larger outlets might list the puzzle editor prominently. If the crossword is from a big paper or site, the editor who finalized the puzzle could well be the one who penned the exact clue text. Personally, I like to hunt these details on the puzzle archive page or the constructor’s social feed — a lot of constructors post their grids and clue notes and will even mention edits and revisions. Keeps me entertained between solving sessions, and I always end up appreciating the little choices that make a clue sing.
Dylan
Dylan
2026-02-08 11:27:33
My take is a bit more procedural: clues are typically created by the puzzle’s constructor, but the version you see is often a collaborative product. I tend to treat a crossword like a short film — the constructor is the writer-director who drafts the script (the grid and initial clues), but the editor is the producer who trims, polishes, or rewrites lines for clarity, fairness, and audience fit. For mainstream outlets there are named editors — and those names show up on the puzzle notes or masthead — so the final voice of a clue can easily be traced if you look at the byline and the editorial credits.

When I want to know the specific human behind a single clue, I usually check three places: the puzzle’s byline on the page or PDF, the puzzle’s discussion thread (if it has one), and the constructor’s personal page or social posts. Enthusiasts and constructors often document changes, which is a goldmine. There are also databases and blogs that archive constructor names and editorial histories. So, while the constructor usually authors clues, credit for the published wording can belong to the editor who finalized the puzzle — and I find both roles fascinating in how they shape small, clever moments in a grid.
Samuel
Samuel
2026-02-08 20:47:10
I tend to keep things simple: the one who most often writes a clue like 'poetry contest' is the puzzle’s constructor, and that’s the first name I check when I’m curious. Sometimes the editor changes phrasing for tone or difficulty, so the exact wording you saw might reflect an editorial tweak rather than the constructor’s original draft. When I want to know for sure, I look at the puzzle’s credit line or the site it was published on — those places usually list the constructor and sometimes the editor too.

On a solve-by-solve level, I’ve noticed certain constructors favor specific turns of phrase, while editors have a habit of smoothing things out. Also, if the fill is the classic 'slam' for a poetry contest clue, that’s a pretty standard constructor move, but who actually typed that clue into the final puzzle can be either the constructor or the editor. I enjoy spotting those tiny stylistic fingerprints; they make solving feel personal and human.
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