Emily Cox (puzzle writer)

Emily Cox is an American puzzle writer. She and her partner, Henry Rathvon, wrote "The Atlantic Puzzler,"[1] a cryptic crossword featured each month in the magazine The Atlantic Monthly from 1977 to August 2009.[2] (After March 2006, the Puzzler was published solely online at The Atlantic's website.) They also create acrostic puzzles for The New York Times, cryptic crosswords for Canada's National Post, various puzzles for the US Airways in-flight magazine, and Sunday crosswords for The Boston Globe. Cox and Rathvon are now also contributing cryptic crosswords to The Wall Street Journal on Saturdays.

Emily Cox.

Personal life

Emily and her partner, Henry, lived in Hershey, Pennsylvania. At young age, Emily showed interest in playing trombone, painting suspension bridges,[3] reading about science matters, and rock climbing.[4]

gollark: I mean, much.
gollark: My bot should definitely be added and will *not* harvest anyone's soul and/or data, probably.
gollark: There's no command for marriage handling so I have to manually dump SQL into its debug interface for marriages.
gollark: I mean, my Discord bot can do marriage, is it more or less official than that?
gollark: How official was this marriage?

References

  1. Arnot, Michelle (August 5, 2008). Four-Letter Words: And Other Secrets of a Crossword Insider. Penguin. p. 78. ISBN 978-0-399-53435-5.
  2. "77 North Washington Street". The Atlantic. August 1997. Retrieved January 16, 2018.
  3. "Emily Cox and Henry Rathvon". The Atlantic. Retrieved January 16, 2018.
  4. Horne, Jim (November 8, 2008). "Acrostics Creators". The New York Times. Retrieved January 16, 2018.


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