You have my apologies for my tardiness in getting the blog posted. I meant to do it last night but got absorbed in Hitchcock’s Notorious and entirely forgot about it. Still, not as late as I was on Tuesday, though!
In my haste to complete it knowing I needed to get the blog up asap, I went a bit wrong in the NW corner, throwing in WEDGWOOD and WISDOM. I thought WEDGWOOD was a place in Birmingham (it isn’t) and a man of reading might be a man of wisdom, and that was about it. I’m still not sure about 1d.
Some good stuff in here, and had I not been so hurried due to my own forgetfulness, I’m sure I would have enjoyed it much more than I did.
cd = cryptic def., dd = double def., rev = reversal, homophones are written in quotes, anagrams as (–)*, and removals like this
| Across | |
|---|---|
| 1 | LADY WOOD – dd – Ladywood is an area of Birmingham, and Sir Henry Wood’s partner would presumably be Lady Wood. |
| 5 | PASCAL – the SI unit of pressure. The H of Holiday is removed from PASCHAL. I knew the unit, but not the word for Easter. |
| 9 | SARDONYX = DON in (X-RAYS)* |
| 10 | P + ROUST |
| 12 | O + WING |
| 13 | P(A + RAM)ETER |
| 14 | CON + CUP + I + SCENT – Another new word for me, but I pieced it together from the wordplay |
| 18 | RIDER + HAGGARD |
| 21 | TRUNCHEON = LUNCHEON with T |
| 23 | POINT – dd – Today’s cricket clue. Point is a fielding position on the leg side. Or there’s Silly Point when the fielder gets really close in. Oops, that’s the off side, not the leg side of course. Glad to see Jimbo’s paying attention. |
| 24 | HE(AT)ED – ‘The opposite’ implies that it’s actually notice receiving at. |
| 25 | PI + RATING – Is ‘purportedly’ really needed here? |
| 26 | hidden – deliberately omitted |
| 27 | AT TO |
| Down | |
| 1 | LESSO |
| 2 | D(ER)AIL – DAIL being the lower house in the Irish Parliament |
| 3 | WRONGDOER – One of those reversed clues where the wordplay is contained within the solution, i.e. ‘rode’ = (DOER)* with WRONG acting as an anagrind. |
| 4 | OLYMPIC GAMES = (COME + A GYMSLIP)* – A very neat anagrist |
| 6 | ABRAM = AB + MAR rev |
| 7 | COUR(T |
| 8 | L |
| 11 | PROPAGANDIST = PRO + PAGAN + I’D rev + ST |
| 15 | S(TRAP)PA + DO – I’m sure I’ve seen this word before in another puzzle. It was new to me then, but I remembered it this time. |
| 16 | CRO( |
| 17 | ADJU |
| 19 | MINI ON – This made me chuckle. |
| 20 | ST(AGE)Y – This confused me at first as I was assuming that time was T. What’s a SAGEY? I thought. |
| 22 | deliberately omitted |
A good puzzle although not quite in yesterday’s league (a puzzle I only got round to doing this morning). I marked the same minor queries as you – but none of them held me up. 20 enjoyable minutes
Why have pigs gained this bad press? A STY is not necessarily a ‘squalid place’ (pigs by nature are cleaner than many other animals). And, while I’m ranting, why do badgers enjoy such an unjustified good press …?
Lots of unknown GK (the writer, the mineral, the B’ham area), most of which I got from the cryptic, also held me up.
Not a very good week for me at all.
Best wishes to all for a good weekend!
Hope no one else was so perplexed! Really … I do!
I started incredibly slowly on this: my first in was 26ac. The pace picked up after about 5 minutes, but I was heavily reliant on checkers all the way through. I almost gave up on 1ac at the end, because I didn’t know either the area of Birmingham or (rather disgracefully) the conductor. Fortunately inspiration struck.
Funny to see SARDONYX again so soon after its last outing.
Like Dave I wondered about “with” in 21ac but overall I thought this was a solid typical Times offering.
I did have some doubt about ‘Ladywood’; I didn’t know what to make of ‘musical’ in that position. I think it is just a throw-in to steer you to the right Sir Henry.
Didn’t understand 1dn where I bunged in LESSON in desperation to finish. 80 minutes with a couple of lookups along the way.
Must make a list of people who have guaranteed their immortality regardless of merit because their names present cryptic compilers with lots to work on. After all, who would remember Concupiscence in Croydon by Roger M Daley were it not for crosswords.
Otherwise one of those wavelength days when it all seemed sort of easy while expecting that others would struggle. I did, however, essay LARKWOOD for 1ac having knocked off LESSOR, reading = lesson being indelibly imprinted following a schooldays punishment.
CRO(T)CHET = embroidery is, of course, wrong unless you allow it in the “added decoration” sense, when it’s still wrong. Doesn’t matter for those of us that routinely confuse knitting and sewing anyway, when anything vaguely stitchy will do.
CoD to 21: decent surface, clever play.
43mins, liked the subtlety of 24a HEATED.