I'm curious about how any of you gauge if an entry has "sparkle", if it should be avoided at all costs, or something in between.
Take the entry LUCKYSHOT, for example. The phrase seems adequately common, it's certainly nothing obscure, and it seems like it has some promising clueing possibilities, IMO. When I check crosswordgiant.com, crosswordtracker.com, etc., I see a single use of this entry in Jonesin' Crosswords in 2009 but nothing else in any other publications (NYT, LAT, WSJ, etc.), and this raises alarms. It makes me suspect that there must be something about this phrase that no one wants to touch. I find it hard to believe there's something about this phrase that fails the Sunday morning breakfast table test, but the utter lack of its presence in publication makes me wonder: is it just too boring for general use? But I see hundreds of longer entries (and clues) that seem far more "boring" than this phrase, so I doubt that's it. Is there something else going on here? Is it somehow offensive? I ask these questions about a lot of words/phrases that I consider using that seem viable and reasonably (even very) common but somehow have never been published. Keep in mind that I have yet to have a puzzle published, so I'm working under a certain level of paranoia regarding having my puzzles rejected (and a certain level of ignorance that comes with being green). I want to craft my puzzles in a way that publishers find acceptable, but it seems hard to gauge whether to use a certain word/phrase or not.
I don't want to worry too much about whether a phrase has been published or not, and it seems like a good thing to debut phrases, but how do you really know if an entry has "sparkle" or not, and how do you know if a word/phrase that doesn't appear in a previously published puzzle is a viable entry that won't get your puzzle rejected? It seems that over-reliance on the above websites to verify a phrase's publication history is a great way to reinforce the use of fewer words/phrases at the expense of other possibilities.