Time: 39 minutes
Music: Mozart, Symphony 41, Fricsay/BPO
I suspect this was a very easy puzzle where I was way off the wavelength. Except for 1 across, an immediate write-in, I struggled with simple clues that should have been immediately obvious. None of the answers were obscure, either. Oh, well, that’s the way it goes sometimes.
I see the SNITCH is a little above 100, but it’s very early.
| Across | |
| 1 | Sorting out crash blame? Cue an ——— (9,6) |
| AMBULANCE CHASER – Anagram of CRASH BLAME? CUE AN. | |
| 9 | Wonderful place — no opening for larceny, reasonably secure (9) |
| FAIRYLAND – FAIR[l]Y + LAND, a lift-and-separate. | |
| 10 | Deploying thought after losing millions (5) |
| USING – [m]USING. | |
| 11 | Agreement backing troops in difficult situation (6) |
| ORDEAL – OR + DEAL, my LOI, one I was strangely blind to. | |
| 12 | Negative figure in drama, ultimately, or in the novel (8) |
| ANTIHERO – [dram]A + anagram of OR IN THE. | |
| 13 | Artist in time for lecture? (6) |
| TIRADE – TI(RA)DE, time and tide, that is. | |
| 15 | Most successful pledge disposing of Bible as a gift (8) |
| BESTOWAL – BEST + [av]OWAL, remove the Authorized Version. | |
| 18 | Stop endlessly walking round equipment (4,2,2) |
| PACK IT IN – PAC(KIT)IN[g]. | |
| 19 | Newspaper report dismissing new collection (6) |
| RAGBAG – RAG + BA[n]G. | |
| 21 | Capital person finished after working to link both sides (8) |
| LONDONER – L(ON,DONE)R, where left and right are the sides. | |
| 23 | Sport involved in covering winter sports venue (3,3) |
| SKI RUN – SKI(RU)N. Nearly always Rugby Union. | |
| 26 | After initial cut, give positive response to extra money (5) |
| RAISE – [p]RAISE. | |
| 27 | Subsequent events end in a religious expression I let loose (9) |
| AFTERMATH – A + F(TERM)A[i]TH, one nearly everyone biffed, including me. | |
| 28 | Note: tipsy gamers ruined computer software (9,6) |
| OPERATING SYSTEM – anagram of NOTE: TIPSY GAMERS. | |
| Down | |
| 1 | A feature of church keeping Father upset (7) |
| AFFRONT – AF(FR)ONT, which I thought was a front when I solved it. | |
| 2 | Window fitting, large, wedged in awkward position (5) |
| BLIND – B(L)IND. | |
| 3 | Hedging material in line daily becoming wilder (9) |
| LEYLANDII – anagram of LINE DAILY, a rather obscure plant over here – must be British. | |
| 4 | Ingenious fuel, replacing source of power with nitrogen (4) |
| NEAT – -p,+N EAT, a simple letter substitution clue. | |
| 5 | Risk complete outrage (8) |
| ENDANGER – END + ANGER, another one I inexpoicably struggled with. | |
| 6 | Spirit vital to embellish our ideas (5) |
| HOURI – hidden in [embellis}H OUR I[deas}. | |
| 7 | Rest before we start in battle? It’s a trap (6,3) |
| SPIDER WEB – SPIDER + WE + B[attle], the spider that’s used in billiards. | |
| 8 | Mock lines about the same toy (3,4) |
| RAG DOLL – RAG (DO) L,L, which most solvers will biff. | |
| 14 | Energy concentrated in anger? Make friends again (9) |
| RECONCILE – R(E,CONC)ILE. Conc is given as a valid abbreviation in Chambers. | |
| 16 | Author shows computer expert diving into river (9) |
| THACKERAY – T(HACKER)AY. | |
| 17 | Large copy, mostly one for regular readers? (8) |
| LITERATI – L + ITERAT[e] + I. | |
| 18 | Duller month in Mediterranean city (7) |
| PALERMO – PALER + MO. | |
| 20 | Stuff that may be checked and good to be included amongst drink and meat (7) |
| GINGHAM – GIN (G) HAM. | |
| 22 | Nothing gets ahead of the greatest, latest thing (5) |
| OMEGA – O + MEGA. | |
| 24 | “Banter”, as in “nonsense” (5) |
| ROAST – RO(AS)T. | |
| 25 | Mount tailless deer (4) |
| STAG – STAG[e], another one that I wasn’t too swift on. | |
LEYLANDII wasn’t known, or remembered, or easy.
In recent weeks I’ve taken advantage of my free time to read some of the long classics that I’ve been afraid to take on in the course of a busy working life. I’ve just finished two, Vanity Fair and Bleak House, about 2000 pages of reading, which were both suberb. Thank you Lockdown.
Obviously was on the wavelength today – 26 mins.
Edited at 2020-06-15 07:28 am (UTC)
I looked twice at SPIDER WEB as although I’m familiar with ‘spiderweb’ and even ‘spider-web’, to my mind the two word version needs to be ‘spider’s web’. The Oxfords agree with me and Collins says SPIDER WEB is American, but Chambers is not so picky, though it does also mention America in one of its entries.
NHO ROAST as ‘banter’ but again Chambers supports it when the other usual sources don’t.
Got AMBULANCE CHASER early on.
Amazed that LEYLANDII has raised some eyebrows. They are the scourge of suburbia in the UK. People plant them to provide boundaries and screening for privacy between properties but they grow like topsy and can reach up to 50 feet if unchecked, cutting out all daylight and sunshine. They are also expensive to maintain and keep under control which is why they are so often left to their own devices. The cause of many a neighbourhood dispute.
Edited at 2020-06-15 05:33 am (UTC)
Edited at 2020-06-15 06:42 am (UTC)
MER at Banter=Roast.
27ac is only possible as a biff-and-work-backwards (or BAWB, as I will now call such).
Thanks setter and Vinyl.
I’d like to join the ranks of lockdown LITERATI but the necessary state of mind for concentrated reading seems hard to gather at the moment…
Both ‘roast’ and ‘banter’ have now lost their earlier, gentler, meanings, which I think are being equated in the clue.
COD to BESTOWAL.
16’07” thanks vinyl and setter.
Leylandii are English, so our colonial cousins may not have come across them, although in fact they are a hybrid cross of two American cypress species, first observed in the Leyland Forest, which walkers on St Cuthbert’s Way will traverse. I asked a tree surgeon once how tall they grow, and he said nobody knew because none in the UK have stopped growing yet .. but there are several over 130ft tall now. I hate them.
COD AMBULANCE CHASER, very nice &lit.
Friday’s answer: the next in the series Austria, Belgium, Cuba, is Germany – single-letter international vehicle codes – the one after that is Spain.
Today’s question: of the 100 largest Mediterranean islands, estimate how many are Greek.
Edited at 2020-06-15 08:08 am (UTC)
As Chairman for many years of our local Residents Association I know more about LEYLANDII than is healthy. I’d cheerfully blow them all up. There is no actual law that limits their height but a local council has powers to act once “a hedge is affecting a neighbour’s reasonable enjoyment of their property”.
LOI was houri but affront, ordeal and fairyland were only just before- that was a trying corner.
Still, a good lesson in not being complacent about Mondays.
My least favourite clue type is omission, and there were at least seven in this puzzle – so I already had the hump before the self-inflicted final derailment. Shared the MERs of others on SPIDER WEB and ROAST.
All in all a grumpy start to the week.
Edited at 2020-06-15 08:49 am (UTC)
Like others, I’m not convinced by ROAST for banter. While I recognise that “it’s just banter” is an increasingly futile attempt to cover up rudeness or “hate speech”, it feels a long way from severe criticism. But the I’ve just noted that Chambers has “to criticize excessively, even sarcastically; to banter” under roast, so I guess I’m behind the times.
I had no idea what was going on in AFTERMATH, so thanks and congratulations to V for actually working it out.
COD: Pack it in.
As others have noted the notorious LEYLANDII will be familiar to most people in this country but perhaps not on the other side of the pond.
Dave.
Another MER at roast/banter, but otherwise a typically excellent puzzle.
preferred paper – subsequently I am still prone to mis-entering answers and then having to re-type them……
Hence 32.57 rather than the actual solving time which was around 29 minutes.
Thank you to setter and blogger.
Dave.
Can someone help me with the “DO” part of Ragdoll?
thanks
Slightly embarrassed that ENDANGER didn’t come to me until my second go, and AMBULANCE CHASER seems to have taken me longer than most. SPIDER WEB took me a while too, as I was expecting the second word to be “war”, and I didn’t work out spider = rest until after it had gone in.
Didn’t parse AFTERMATH, same MERs as other contributors.
FOI AMBULANCE CHASER
LOI ANTIHERO
COD SPIDER WEB
TIME 10:02
I sit 34th on the leaderboard, but isn’t there something that can be done to freeze out the persistent neutrinos ? Never mind, I’m off to find the truth as shown in SNITCH !
Didn’t manage to fully parse BESTOWAL or AFTERMATH.
Otherwise not too difficult.
Anything LJ regards as suspicious it bungs into bin marked ‘Suspicious messages’ so that one of the TfTT bloggers can review it and decided whether to ‘unspam’ it. This may seem a bit cautious but you might not believe the number of porn links it catches. I seem to spend a lot of time deleting them and I assume other bloggers are doing it too.
Laughed out loud at the BAWB suggestion from our illustrious Sunday Setter – if ever there was a parsing which justified a new acronym, AFTERMATH was it.
Unlike others 1ac wasn’t a write in for me as I originally started this at 600am this morning having thought I had clicked on the Concise. A degree of bafflement briefly followed and even when I re-started this evening it didn’t jump out. Liked the clue though
Thanks Setter for an enjoyable half an hour and Vinyl for the blog.
LOI 2dn BLIND
COD 12ac ANTIHERO
WOD LEYLANDII
Time Very Slow!
28mins all ok in the end.
Edited at 2020-06-16 01:16 pm (UTC)