Across
1 ARC-LAMP light
A CLAMP (that sort of brace) cuddles the front of Reading
5 FATIGUE exhaustion
Decide destiny is FATE, initially in is I, and 50% of men is GUys, and assemble.
9 PROFUSELY in great abundance
Most crossword sees are ELY. Academics, or PROFS, surround U(niversity) and are placed ahead of the Ship of the Fens
10 SHEAF bundle
Take bosS ultimately, and HE man, with A F(ollowing)
11 CATER Provide
Hidden in musiC AT ERfurt. This time you don’t need to know anything about Erfurt to get the entry, but as it happens, music at Erfurt was almost certainly Pachelbel’s greatest hit.
12 INAMORATO lover
Very shortly provides IN A MO, and an O(ld) TAR rebuffed or reversed provides the rest, and makes sure you put an O on the end, not an A
14 A WALK IN THE PARK A piece of cake
…or something a Setter might enjoy if he were a dog rather than a crossword compiler, though what do I know?
17 UNCLE TOM’S CABIN novel
Harriet Beecher Stowe’s pioneering anti-slavery tract/loathsome racist stereotyping (take your pick). Here’s how our version is created: Cat is TOM, pawnbroker’s car is UNCLE’S CAB, and “in” is – um – IN. Insert part 1 into part 2, and attach part 3 to the rear.
21 APPETISER hors-d’ouvre
The letters of PRAISE are redistributed around your favourite PET
23 ALIEN Extraterrestrial
Brings together two of the greatest space pioneers of all time (so far). If not Yuri G(agarin) then NEIL A(rmstrong) the latter being “brought back”. My favourite of the day. Gagarin’s incredibly courageous flight was 54 years ago. Arrrgh!
24 SCANT Inadequate
Two standards: container is CAN, street, ST. Assemble
25 KITTIWAKE Seabird
A “said” KITTY or pool (think poker) and a ship’s track to provide the WAKE. A migratory visitor from a very recent ST grid.
26 CONCERN business
Or indeed, “have something to do with”
27 SEGMENT Part of circle
Ecstatic gives SENT, English E, and variety of crop is the genetically modified version, GM. Assemble.
Down
1 ASPECT Outlook
Poisonous type is ASP, City (the postcode) is EC plus T(rader) “originally”
2 CHOCTAW native of SE USA
H(ot) OCT(ober) in CA(lifornia) plus W(ith). And yes, you have heard the word (earworm alert). Choctaw Ridge is the location of the Talahatchie Bridge, from which Billy Joe leapt to his doom in Bobby Gentry’s song.
3 AQUARELLE [watercolour] painting
A row is A QUARREL, in which you are invited to ignore one R(ight) before placing the mutilated collection over the French for “the”. That’ll be LE, then.
4 PRECIPITOUS very steep
Treasured indicates PRECIOUS, Gollum’s epithet for “his” One Ring. A mine is a PIT. Surround one with the other.
5 FLY Canny
Or a fisherman’s fly. I’ll risk saying that a doctor is a type of fly as used by J R Hartley. The only time I went fishing, I caught my own top lip, and vowed never to do that to a fish.
6 TASSO Poet
Two S(ons) are taken by TAO, Chinese philosophy. Torquato Tasso is, it turns out, not Latin but 15th century Italian. Thought highly of love, as his quote above indicates
7 GRENADA Caribbean Island
Our politician is a GREEN, with the central E taken out. Add AD for publicity and the remaining A.
8 ELFLOCKS Tangled hair
Turns up in the Queen Mab verses in Romeo and Juliet. Probably easier to get from the wordplay. The Spanish congregations are (slightly ungrammatically) el flocks.
13 ALTOSTRATUS cloud
Working girls are TARTS (not necessarily my opinion), here inverted in a confusion of LOUTS and tagged onto the remaining A in the clue.
15 EMANATING proceeding
Put the letters of GENT and MANIA together and stir (“misguided”).
16 JURASSIC of a certain age
Scottish island JURA and SIC (thus) accomodate the S(outh) pole
18 CAPTAIN Ahab was one
Liable provides APT, and Adam’s loins produce CAIN with a bit of help from Eve. Insert one into the other.
19 IMITATE copy
Fellow, for no particular reason, gives TIM. Add I and invert, and add A note TE.
20 INGEST Do this to food…
… and think “goodness, that sounds a lot like in jest”
22 TITHE tax
Article is THE, and wine is IT, short for Italial Vermouth, as in gin and it
25 KIN family
Peel is sKIN, lose the S, the last letter of Whigs, as instructed
FOI UNCLE TOM’S CABIN LOI ELFLOCKS
Easiest Thursday for a few weeks.
Nothing stood out.
horryd Shanghai
Torquato Tasso was actually a 16th century Italian poet, most famous for his Gerusalemme Liberata – a worthy successor to Boiardo and Ariosto, and a major influence on Spenser’s Faerie Queene.
Yes indeed. I distinctly remember looking up Tasso’s dates, both beginning with 15, and telling myself that I’d only look stupid if I recorded that as 15th century. Which turns out to be true.
Edited at 2015-12-10 06:20 am (UTC)
I did have a little trouble with ‘Jurassic’ and ‘aquarelle’, but eventually saw them.
Is it possible that ‘a walk in the park’ is a tribute to our quondam Tuesday blogger? I believe most of the setters are regular readers here.
I suspected many of the answers straight away but then got held up trying to check them against the wordplay. A lot of bits and pieces in this puzzle were new to me.
Surely working girls may be PROS, but TARTS? That’s a bit harsh.
I also thought we might have ‘see’ = V and was looking for something like PROVIDENT at 9A.
Very much enjoyed learning the term ELFLOCKS, which I wake up with every morning.
Thanks to z8b8d8k for the blog. I am still trying in vain to figure out the pronunciation of your name.
Edited at 2015-12-10 05:00 am (UTC)
The 8s are As, the only configuration LJ would allow, every other variation apparently already taken. See Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick and Titch. Thanks for asking!
+j
The last of these was new to me and a quick Google suggests it has only come up once previously, in July 2007, shortly before I discovered TftT on which occasion it took a hyphen.
Edited at 2015-12-10 05:16 am (UTC)
Turns out I flew a bit too quickly, ending up with an AUTOSTRATUS (a very fast Italian cloud).
I didn’t know AQUARELLE or the poet, but they were easily gettable from the clues.
Elves’ hair in Tolkien seems to be long and straight and so lustrous it could be used in a shampoo commercial. This might have confused the matter if I hadn’t come to the correct conclusion that it’s what elves do to your hair, not their own (though the Tolkien elves obviously had better things to do than go messing with people’s barnets).
Article here: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/12041894/GCHQ-Christmas-card-question-Do-you-know-the-puzzle-answer.html
Link here: http://www.gchq.gov.uk/SiteCollectionImages/grid-shading-puzzle.jpg
Apparently it’s the first in a series. Once you’ve completed the series you send the solution to a revealed email address, though frankly this seems like window dressing — they already know who you are.
Edited at 2015-12-10 09:18 am (UTC)
Edited at 2015-12-10 09:12 pm (UTC)
p.s. or is that the point of the nonogram? I haven’t attempted it yet.
edit: sorry for ruining your plans for Thursday!
Edited at 2015-12-11 08:54 am (UTC)
I’m now at the same point John reached and … hm … might be as far as I go.
Although very bookish the literary clues were mainly common references so I had no problem with them. I think I’ve seen ELFLOCKS more recently than 2007 – probably barred crossword – but cryptic was easy enough
Nice blog again z8 (did I say that right?)
Edited at 2015-12-10 12:11 pm (UTC)
Edited at 2015-12-10 01:01 pm (UTC)
COD to CHOCTAW simply because it gave Z an excuse to link to Bobby Gentry, although I went to the longer version. Yours is missing a verse Z. And that bridge in your clip doesn’t look like it would have served Billy Joe’s purpose, lick o’ sense or not.
Anyway, thanks setter and Z. And top hats off to Verlaine.
Jimbo’s nod to the Jurassic Coast has reminded me of probably my favourite part of the UK. Up until then the Jura part of the clue had me thinking about whisky. Hopefully Santa’s going to bring me plenty!
Perfectly sound standard Times fare, with in a mo and Neil A giving it a bit of a lift.
Having trouble downloading the GCHQ picture, either their site is being hacked or they’re too busy hacking me.
Edited at 2015-12-10 06:46 pm (UTC)
Everything went in smoothly (the answers, that is, not the G&Ts, although they did), with ELFLOCKS my only NHO. I’m now trying to imagine a Rasta version of Legless (or whatever the elf was called in Tolkien’s interminable ring cycle).
AQUARELLE was half-known, as was TASSO. I spent a while not writing in KITTIWAKE because it had cropped up very recently and I wasn’t going to fall for it until I’d figured out the parsing.
I am now off to celebrate with a third G&T.
(I quite agree with you about Z8’s blog entries: very enjoyable – apart perhaps from his spelling of “accommodate” 🙂
PS: You are Poat, aren’t you? If so, I’ll write you a separate note about Five One-Time Pads. (I don’t want to incur the wrath of the Listener Crossword Police by discussing it openly before the solution is published. Neither they nor anyone else should take this comment as an indication of whether or not I’ve completed the puzzle or indeed got any further than reading the preamble.)
Hope you enjoyed it, if indeed you read beyond the preamble