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Emily Cox and Henry Rathvon are a married, retired American puzzle-writing team. They wrote the "Atlantic Puzzler", a monthly cryptic crossword in The Atlantic magazine, from September 1977 to October 2009, [ 1 ] [ 2 ] and wrote cryptic crosswords every four weeks for The Wall Street Journal from 2010 to 2023.
Henry Hook (September 18, 1955 – October 27, 2015) was an American creator of crossword puzzles, widely credited with popularizing the cryptic crossword in North America. With Henry Rathvon and Emily Cox, he wrote the crossword for the Boston Globe. Hook began constructing crosswords at age 14, when he sent a rebuttal crossword to Eugene T ...
Emily Cox and Henry Rathvon took over the bi-weekly setting duties for the NYT in 1999. A similar puzzle, called a Trans-O-Gram, by Svend Petersen, and later, Kem Putney, appeared in National Review from 1963 to 1993. Trans-O-Grams were often themed puzzles, with clues related to the quote.
[11] Currently, every other week is an acrostic puzzle authored by Emily Cox and Henry Rathvon, with a rotating selection of other puzzles, including diagramless crosswords, Puns and Anagrams, cryptics (a.k.a. "British-style crosswords"), Split Decisions, Spiral Crosswords, word games, and more rarely, other types (some authored by Shortz ...
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From 1977 to 2006, The Atlantic regularly featured a cryptic crossword "Puzzler" by the husband and wife team of Emily Cox and Henry Rathvon. From 2006 to 2009, The Atlantic puzzler appeared only online. In 2010, Cox and Rathvon's efforts began to appear monthly in The Wall Street Journal. [53]
Berkley Books(4) Emily Henry has officially taken over the rom-com book world — and she’s about to bring some of her stories to life on screen. Henry, along with Lyrical Media and Ryder ...
This rotates every other week between an acrostic (long written by Emily Cox and Henry Rathvon) and other kinds of crosswords (cryptic, puns and anagrams, diagramless, etc.) and word puzzles of other formats (Split Decisions, Spiral, Marching Bands, etc.). [44]