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John Galbraith Graham

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
British crossword compiler
For other people named John Galbraith, seeJohn Galbraith (disambiguation).

John Graham
John Graham in 2013
Born(1921-02-16)16 February 1921
Died26 November 2013(2013-11-26) (aged 92)
Other namesAraucaria
Cinephile
Occupations
  • Crossword setter
  • priest
Parents

John Galbraith GrahamMBE (16 February 1921 – 26 November 2013[1]) was a Britishcrossword compiler, best known asAraucaria ofThe Guardian. He was also, like his fatherEric Graham,[2] aChurch of England priest.

Career

[edit]

Graham was born inOxford, where his father,Eric Graham, held the post of dean ofOriel College. The family moved to a country rectory in Wiltshire.After attendingSt Edward's School, Oxford, he obtained a place to read classics atKing's College, Cambridge, leaving to join theRAF when the Second World War began. After the war he returned to King's to read theology. In 1949 he joined the staff ofSt Chad's College,Durham as Chaplain and Tutor where he worked until 1952. On Graham's departure the Principal, Theo Wetherall, paying tribute to his good nature, wrote that "he squandered his sensitive taste and knowledge of Classics on 1B Greek with unfailing patience enlivened by rare expressions of nausea". He later became a vicar inHuntingdonshire.[3]

Writing his first puzzle forThe Guardian in July 1958, he eventually took to compiling crosswords full-time when his divorce in the late 1970s lost him his living as a clergyman (he was reinstated after the death of his first wife). In December 1970,The Guardian began publishing its crosswords under the pseudonyms of their compilers, at which point Graham selected the name "Araucaria".

Besides Araucaria'scryptic crosswords inThe Guardian, of which he produced around six per month, he also set around a third of the quick crosswords forThe Guardian, cryptic crosswords asCinephile in theFinancial Times and puzzles for other publications.[4] In 1984, he founded 1 Across magazine as a way of providing more of his puzzles to subscribers who wanted them; the magazine still publishes five crosswords monthly: four new puzzles by various setters, and one by Araucaria taken from the extensive 1 Across archive.[5]

He took his pseudonym from themonkey-puzzle tree, whose Latin name isAraucaria araucana. Another name for this tree is the "Chile Pine", of which "Cinephile" is an anagram, demonstrating his love for film.

Graham lived inSomersham, Cambridgeshire. He was made a Member of theOrder of the British Empire in the 2005 New Year's Honours, for services to the newspaper industry.[6] In July 2011 Graham was the subject of the BBC radio programmeDesert Island Discs,[7] in which he revealed that he always usedScrabble tiles as an aid when compiling.

The December 2012 issue of1 Across magazine printed an Araucaria puzzle which revealed that Graham had oesophageal cancer.[8] The puzzle was reprinted asGuardian cryptic No. 25,842[9] on 11 January 2013. The puzzle had a supplementary narrative beginning "Araucaria has 18 down of the 19, which is being treated with 13 15".[10] Those who solved the puzzle found the answer to 18 down was "cancer", to 19 "oesophagus", and to 13 and 15 "palliative" and "care". Other clues had answers such as "Macmillan Nurse", "stent", "chemotherapy", "endoscopy" and "sunset".[9] Araucaria said this particular puzzle had not taken him very long, adding that a crossword had seemed the most fitting way to make the announcement. "It seemed the natural thing to do somehow," he said. "It just seemed right."

The last Araucaria puzzle published before Graham's death also had some hidden meanings: it included answers such as "cottage hospital", "nil by mouth" and "time to go".[11] Fellow Guardian crossword compiler and friendSandy Balfour was with Graham on the night of his death, reading to him. A year after his death, on 27 November 2014, The Guardian published a crossword with the grid and some clues compiled by him but completed by his friend and fellow compiler 'Philistine'.[12] He was described as having a "mischievous erudition, humility and courage."[13]

Style

[edit]

Graham's clue-writing style made him one of the best-loved of all setters. His style falls into a grouping sometimes referred to as "Araucarian". This style, of whichThe Guardian'sBunthorne was another notable exponent, has influenced most of the current crop of Guardian setters and contrasts with the more rigid "Ximenean" style favoured byThe Times.

Widely admired for his clever use of cross-references and special themes, he was usually called upon to produce the extra-large puzzles printed inThe Guardian onbank holidays; these sometimes even included two grids, with complicated rules governing the placing of answers in each.

He is also credited with creating a new format of crossword, the "alphabetical jigsaw" in which the clues are labelled with letters rather than numbers, and the grid has no markers to indicate the placement of solutions. Instead the clues are arranged in alphabetical order of their answer – usually labelled with the beginning letter, with either one or two clues for each letter. The answers are to be placed "jigsaw-wise, however they may fit," though of course only one arrangement will work. These puzzles have been christened 'araubeticals' by fans on the crossword website www.fifteensquared.net.[14] Araucaria's clues to the alphabetical jigsaws are often in the form of rhyming couplets iniambic pentameter. In a few puzzles, an additional clue is given which describes a phrase or set of words placed around the edge of the grid (alternate squares of the perimeter being black) to give a starting point for placing some of the answers.

His clues often included long anagrams, with his favourite appearing in a Christmas puzzle:

O hark the herald angels sing the boy’s descent which lifted up the world,

an anagram of "While shepherds watched their flocks by night, all seated on the ground".[15]

Another much-quoted example of his brilliance in clue-setting is the following:

Poetical scene with surprisingly chaste Lord Archer vegetating (3, 3, 8, 12)

which yields "The Old Vicarage, Grantchester". This is the title of a poem byRupert Brooke. The anagram was a topical reference toJeffrey Archer who was the vicarage's current owner and was lying low there at the time following a sex scandal.

Books

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Several collections of his crosswords have been published. His crosswords have also been included in many other compilations, not listed here.

  • Monkey Puzzles (2002)
  • Monkey Puzzles volume 2 (2004)
  • Chambers Book of Araucaria Crosswords Volume 1 (2003)
  • Chambers Book of Araucaria Crosswords Volume 2 (2005)
  • Chambers Book of Araucaria Crosswords Volume 3 (2006)
  • Chambers Book of Araucaria Crosswords Volume 4 (2008)

References

[edit]
  1. ^Plunkett, John (26 November 2013)."Rev John Graham, aka crossword setter Araucaria, dies aged 92".The Guardian. Retrieved26 November 2013.
  2. ^Who's Who 1949, Adam & Charles Black, London
  3. ^"The Monkey Puzzler".The Guardian. London. Retrieved4 March 2007.
  4. ^Keegan, William (12 November 2006)."Review: Collins A-Z of Crosswords".The Observer. London. Retrieved4 March 2007.
  5. ^"About us – 1 Across crossword magazine".
  6. ^"Space explorer honoured with CBE". London: BBC. 31 December 2004. Retrieved4 March 2007.
  7. ^"BBC Radio 4 - Desert Island Discs, John Graham".
  8. ^Jones, Sam (11 January 2013)."Crossword master Araucaria reveals in puzzle that he is dying of cancer".The Guardian. Retrieved12 January 2013.
  9. ^ab"Guardian cryptic crossword No. 25,842".The Guardian. 11 January 2013. Retrieved12 January 2013.
  10. ^"Araucaria crossword setter gives cancer clue".BBC News. 12 January 2013. Retrieved12 January 2013.
  11. ^"Rev John Graham, aka crossword setter Araucaria, dies aged 92".The Guardian. 26 November 2013. Retrieved27 November 2013.
  12. ^"Araucaria's final crossword: one last treat from the master".The Guardian. 27 November 2014. Retrieved20 March 2015.
  13. ^Balfour, Sandy (21 December 2013)."My hero: John 'Araucaria' Graham by Sandy Balfour".The Guardian. Retrieved29 June 2018.
  14. ^"Home".fifteensquared.net.
  15. ^Alan Connor (25 December 2009)."Why UK families tackle the Christmas cryptic crossword".BBC News. Retrieved15 November 2011.

External links

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