It's a book about Stephen Sondheim, focusing on his puzzles and games
rather than on the stuff he's most famous for, theater. Of course, it's
the puzzle-y and game-y parts that I'm interested in, because I played
The Game,
a variety of
puzzle hunt
in which teams drive around from puzzle to puzzle over the course of a weekend.
Thanks to Scott "Puzzalot" Royer,
I'd learned a bit about The Game's history—and Stephen Sondheim's name
kept popping up.
I even buckled down and used a microfiche reader at the library
to read (and transcribe) a
1969 London Times article about Sondheim's puzzle hunts and
games.
Matching Minds with Sondheim sums it up:
An exploration of all the vastly different, creative offshoots
of Sondheim's Murder Game can seem to go on forever. … the
Los Angeles
moviegoer who watched
[The Last of] Sheila in 1973,
was inspired to design his own multicity scavenger hunt, which inspired
Disney's 1980 film Midnight Madness,
which
inspired one of its moviegoers
to create a similar game, which he eventually took
to Microsoft, …
Everything I found out hinted that there was plenty more to know:
Sondheim ran puzzly treasure hunts at friends' parties; he ran public
treasure hunts for charities, he brought british-style cryptic crosswords
to the US, he… Anyhow, this book gets into a lot of that.
I'm glad I read it.
It was slow going for me. I think this book expected to be the
second Sondheim bio read by a Sondheim fan, not necessarily
knowledgable about games or puzzles.
E.g., here's how
Oscar Hammerstein
is introduced in the book: "Hammerstein".
I read that and thought "Oh, right, uh, I think he worked on Oklahoma!
and some other stuff important enough that I'm going to
smack my forehead that it slipped my mind over the years."
On the other hand, noted board game expert
Sid Sackson
gets two pages of introduction. In a gathering of nerds, I'm probably
not the biggest board game fan, but even I know about Sid Sackson.
But if you expect your reader to be already-knowledgable about
Sondheim's theater-stuff but new to gnarly games, allotting two pages
for Sackson's introduction makes sense, as does assuming that the reader
already knows Hammerstein mentored Sondheim and worked on
The Sound of Music, how could you forget that? 😳
This book delivers the goods. E.g., there's a version
of Sondheim's Murder Game puzzle as presented in Games Magazine.
There are snippets of puzzles from later Sondheim hunts, albeit maybe
just enough to get the flavor. Like, I tried solving a rebus and
got nonsense—only to read on and find out the book just showed
the top â…“ of the puzzle. I, avid puzzler, was miffed: why
only show the top bit? But this was probably sensible for the audience;
most folks probably weren't trying to solve the puzzles they encountered
in the book.
No, really. I was kinda surprised to find an
erratum
in the fourth printing of the book, especially in a puzzle;
shouldn't eagle-eyed puzzlers already have spotted+reported all of those?
But of course, it makes sense if most readers aren't slowing down
to solve the puzzles.
(Also, that puzzle was a reprint of a cryptic crossword by Mark sHalpin;
so you can bet that the truly serious puzzle-nerds probably chuckled
"ah yes, I remember solving this delightful trifle back when it first
appeared," instead of, like me, struggling through with nice-but-not-amazing
cryptic crossword skills.)
It's kind of weird the way that celebrities keep popping up, but I guess
it makes sense. If I wanted a puzzlehunt to involve a fax machine clue,
I'd ask my friends to find out who had a fax machine they could
loan out for the weekend. Same with Sondheim, except in his case, the
friend was Stephen Fry‽ So random.
Permalink
2026-05-28T23:09:49.916380
I saw some chalk art on Irving St in #SanFrancisco on Sunday:
- Demon hunter on a roller skates (accompanied by pet on skateboard) by Kal Zakzouk at 20th Ave.
- Various pieces by Hazel, Noah, and perhaps others at 8th Ave.
Permalink
2026-05-26T15:59:13.402276
Yet more #SanFrancisco sights:
- Sidewalk chalk said "Fun this way" with an arrow pointing at the SF Muni Metro light rail Sunset Tunnel. Please don't seek fun in the Sunset Tunnel; dodging trains isn't fun for you or for Muni drivers. (A few steps further on, I saw that the "fun" had been actually behind the old weather station(?) shed on the other side of the tracks, probably much more obvious while it was happening than, say, the next morning.)
- New ped xing signs+lights going in on Parnassus Ave. Several weeks back, I noted that more than a year after a truck hit a pedestrian at Parnassus+Stanyan, we were finally getting some speed humps, albeit shallow. Now I see that we're also getting some new signs with flashing lights… at a different intersection nearby, Hillway. Maybe those speed humps weren't meant to slow down trucks at Stanyan, but rather to help folks cross at Hillway? Anyhow, both of those intersections are pretty iffy; I don't like trying to cross at either of them. Kinda lookin' like SFMTA gave up on any safety improvements for Stanyan tho.
- Families who park on Waller St. before walking to high school graduation ceremonies at Kezar Stadium next week might encounter this front porch goose in appropriate attire.
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2026-05-23T17:27:16.497715
I swear I notice things on my #SanFrancisco walks that aren't sidewalk chalk drawings sometimes. Not today, tho.
Baker St./Haight: There's a patch of sidewalk getting destroyed by tree roots. Somebody decorated it.
Fell St/Cole: Good Luck Circle, Bad Luck Circle. Except the Bad Luck "Circle" was pretty distorted (I edited one photo to trace it).
Permalink
2026-05-19T17:04:07.374802
New-to-me sidewalk chalk #StreetArt by Kal Zakzouk at 20th Ave and Irving in #SanFrancisco this morning:
a snack fan. She's eating an éclair. Since this is San Francisco, you have to wonder whether it's just an éclair or a reference to longtime SF street stencil artist Eclair Bandersnatch. Also in frame: barricades blocking cars away from 19th Avenue, which is still being repaved on weekends.
Permalink
2026-05-09T18:10:10.436173
Walking to the grocery store, I heard a couple of whistle blasts.
I wondered: Ugh, is it ICE?
I looked around, dredging up a todo-list from memory.
Then I spotted the inspiration for the whistle.
I was walking past a construction site.
Those whistles weren't neighbors warning neighbors; the intended audience was just construction workers.
A crane was hoisting some porta-potties, moving them to a place where a truck could drain them.
Whew.
Not ICE agents; just some full porta-potties.
I'm not ashamed I mixed those up, though.
Same aura.
Permalink
2026-05-04T15:05:47.891582
Things I saw walking in #SanFrancisco this morning:
- New-ish Kal Zakzouk sidewalk chalk art on Irving St at 20th Ave: Lady blowing bubbles amongst baby-faced goldfish.
- A stalled bus by the side of Lincoln Way. I'm no expert mechanic, but I think it ran out of tokens.
- Setting up a crane on the very-steep Hillway Ave, tucking a lot of wooden blocks underneath the downhill bits.
Permalink
2026-05-03T12:31:36.969562
Here are some photos of flowers in my neighborhood.
Also, since my main social network Mastodon encourages me to post four pictures at a time, here is a photo of a nearby emergency water system control knob.
Permalink
2026-05-01T15:16:24.655374
I saw some more things on Sunday, but didn't post them then because Mastodon, my main social app, really wants me to post four images at a time. And I got distracted after posting the first batch. Anyhow.
- More Kal Zakzouk chalk art: A lady disguised as a mama dinosaur feeds haunches of meat to a baby dinosaur. I claim that the lady's shoes are godzilloshes.
- Chalk: Folks wrote some encouraging messages along the route of a footrace in Golden Gate Park.
- A quiet street: Arguably not interesting enough to post, but Mastodon really wants me to post four images at a time so here ya go.
Permalink
2026-04-28T15:04:32.382099
A couple of things I saw on my walk this morning in #SanFrancisco:
Some Kal Zakzouk sidewalk chalk art: A bicyclist on a bubbly bike.
An engineering marvel: The re-paving of 19th Avenue
Permalink
2026-04-26T17:33:02.584697