![]() ![]() David is also the author of two books of crosswords: Chromatics (Puzzazz, 2012) and Juicy Crosswords (Sterling/Puzzlewright Press, 2016). He was most recently the editor of The Puzzle Society Crossword. To date, David has had hundreds of puzzles published in the Times and other markets (Los Angeles Times, The Wall Street Journal, Daily Celebrity Crossword, The Crosswords Club, The American Values Club Crossword, BuzzFeed and The Jerusalem Post). At the age of 15, David became the crossword editor of the Orange County Register's 24 affiliated newspapers. “It’s an art form.David Steinberg published his first crossword puzzle in The New York Times when he was just 14 years old, making him the second-youngest constructor to be published under Will Shortz's editorship. “There’s something really elegant to me about interlocking words or just words in general,” he says. (The crossword world isn’t glamorous.) With that seat occupied, Steinberg is considering his options, though crosswords will always figure highly. Steinberg would love to be the next Will Shortz, whose couch he slept on this summer during an internship with the Times. The digital archive is now stored at XWord Info.Īmong the revelations from the effort, older puzzles weren’t nearly as musty as often supposed, although some would be unlikely to pass muster today for other reasons: One had swastika icons, another used “Recent gifts to Japan” as a clue for “bombs.” Steinberg’s database also enabled his analysis of declining numbers of female-constructed puzzles in recent decades, which spurred serious discussion about gender disparity in the crossword-constructing world. In high school, he also led an almost insanely laborious process to track down and digitize the 16,000-odd Times puzzles that appeared from the crossword’s inception in 1942 to 1993, when existing digital records began.Īfter realizing he’d be an old man still working on the project, Steinberg put out an appeal to the crossword community, attracting scores of volunteers from as far away as India who helped unearth all but a few of the puzzles. “That’s so much trust to put in a 15-year-old.” “I’m still amazed they did that,” he says. Since he was 15, he’s been the Orange County Register’s crossword editor, an offer he got after mentioning to a reporter his interest in one day becoming an editor. “He has already done that three times over.”Ĭonstructing for the Times and elsewhere is just part of Steinberg’s portfolio. “There are very few people who have hit for the cycle, or publish on every day of the week,” says Jeff Chen, ’92, himself a prolific constructor who runs the blog XWord Info. Sundays are smorgasbords.)Īnd while Steinberg’s late-week efforts get the most attention, fellow constructors appreciate his ability to tackle the range of puzzles, including lowly Mondays, which present the daunting challenge of needing to be friendly enough for beginners and fresh enough for jaded veterans. (Puzzles get more difficult as the week advances to Saturday. Since then, Steinberg, now a Stanford sophomore, has ranked among the most prolific Times contributors, his work appearing more than 50 times, typically on Fridays and Saturdays, the most difficult days of the week. It appeared in the Times on June 16, 2011, just days after his graduation from eighth grade. After watching the documentary Word Play, in which a master constructor demonstrates making a crossword, Steinberg walked up to his room, pulled out some graph paper and began his craft in earnest.Īfter a pile of rejections and a crucial switch from paper to laptop, he scored with his 17th submission, a fiendish Thursday puzzle that required solvers to crack a code. It would take two more years for him to get that serious. “I might submit it to Will Shortz, editor and maker of the NY Times crossword puzzle,” he wrote on his presentation poster. He made his first crossword for a fifth-grade project-a jumble of trivia and abbreviations perhaps most notable now for its cherubic swagger. ![]() ![]() By kindergarten or so, he was taking on 1,000-piece jigsaw puzzles.Īnd by 10, he was starting to bring his love for both into a common focus. (Unless, of course, you are the type who reads “Place to get drunk before getting high?” and immediately pens in “airport bar.”)īy age 1, Steinberg had not only memorized the alphabet, but also had a pet letter-a wooden “J” he toted wherever he toddled, his mother, Karen Steinberg, says. Looking back, the clues to David Steinberg’s crossword wizardry seem a tad more obvious than, well, the clues in some of Steinberg’s testier puzzles. ![]()
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