





Today in brief: See who was at the Victorian Premier's Literary Awards, Tim Flannery demands action on climate change, Get set for Saturday's crossword with David Astle's tips and Wheeler Weekly: Cartoon by Judy Horacek
Judy Horacek is a Melbourne cartoonist who launched her new cartoon collection If you can’t stand the heat this week.

Noah knew the importance of two, as did Torvill and Dean. Same goes for Cupid and anyone craving that elusive sock. Couples count, and not just for tangoing, but cryptic crosswords too. The secret in fact to solving the ‘other language’ of cryptics is embraced by The Rule Of Two. If you want to unravel a cryptic clue, then it’s time to get binary.
At the drawing board, setters will dabble with a dozen recipes. If I want to clue a word like BINARY, I may consider BRAINY (an anagram), or RAIN splashed inside BY (a sandwich clue), or RANI (a rajah’s wife) reversed in BY, or even BI + NARY (a charade clue). Doodling, these are just four formulas to consider. But whatever tack the setter chooses, his or her clue must obey the Rule of Two.
As you’d expect, the Rule of Two has two clauses. The first relates to how a clue is built. That is, almost all clues contain two elements: the wordplay and the definition. Leaving BINARY alone, consider a clue like Steal greeting card (6). Going by the Rule of Two – Clause 1 – we need to break the clue into two pieces – but which two?
Either ‘steal’ is the answer’s definition, or ‘steal greeting’. And since the latter sounds daft, we should rummage our vocab for a six-letter synonym of steal. PILFER? FINGER? What about SNITCH? Bear in mind, a Quick clue demands nothing else. Steal – the word – is all you get. Cryptics, on the other hand, offer two bites.
Warming to steal as your definition, you’ll now suspect ‘greeting card’ as the wordplay. Does the phrase suggest any of our listed synonyms? Not so far. But wait. A form of greeting is HI. Shuffle your mental deck and you’ll come across JACK. (Is that your card?) To steal is to hijack, and hi-jack equals greeting + card: a charade clue. Better still, you know the answer’s correct as the clue itself confirms it, pointing to the answer from two different angles.
Which leads us to Clause 2, namely a clue’s dual messages. On paper, a clue must own a surface sense, where the whole conjures clarity, while a secondary meaning – the clue’s mechanics – needs to lie below. I’ll bet $2 that most non-cryptic solvers took our greeting-card example literally. What? You want me to rip off Hallmark – why? Besides, stealing is illegal, and I have the right change.
Change, indeed. To hijack any puzzle, change is vital to the non-cryptic outlook. New solvers must convert their brainy into binary, to think lateral over literal, and heed the Rule of Two. Though a warning before you enter this cryptic addiction: think twice.
David Astle is a cruciverbalist and author of Puzzled: Secrets And Clues From A Life Lost In Words.
As Prof Tim Flannery releases Here on Earth, it’s the perfect time to re-visit his keynote address at the Alfred Deakin Lecture series. Flannery challenges the popular perceptions of Darwin’s evolution and asks why our planet is our highest priority.
MC Casey Bennetto rocks the mic in his power ballad to the Victorian Premier’s Literary Awards
Peggy Frew’s made an animated acceptance speech for the Prize for an Unpublished Manuscript
Crikey editor Sophie Black and The Enthusiast’s Mel Campbell share a joke
State Librarian Anne-Marie Schwirtlich, Parliamentary Secretary for the Arts Rob Hudson and Wheeler Centre Director Chrissy Sharp
David Hansen, Winner of the Alfred Deakin Prize for an Essay Advancing Public Debate]
Peter Temple, winner of the Vance Palmer Prize for Fiction, with judge Corrie Perkin
Brenda Walker accepts the Nettie Palmer Prize for Non-fiction
Awards founder and former premier John Cain with Casey Benntto and Chrissy Sharp
Rob Hudson awards Liz Jackson the John Curtain Prize for Journalism as Sarah Reynolds observes
MWF Director Steve Grimwade, poet and broadcaster Alicia Sometimes and Wheeler Centre Head of Programming Michael Williams
Literary Minded’s Angela Meyer, the Age’s Jason Steger, Readings' Martin Shaw and Scribe publisher Henry Rosenbloom
All photos by Jim Lee
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