26122 Something slightly spooky

My run of moderate times continues with a 26.26 for this assemblage of all 26 letters of the alphabet. If you add the number of Es and the number of Us, it’s 26, as is the simple numerical total (5+21) of E and U. Doo doo doo doo. And true but nonsense, of course. During solving, I was also seized by a powerful sense of déjà vu, though I can’t quite work out if it’s justified: I know 6d was in 26,030, but even with the help of LJ’s search, I can’t track down 2d, 9a or 22a in recent puzzles However they too also rang fairly insistant bells to the extent that I began to wonder whether this was one of those puzzles where the setter was cleverly recycling stuff.
All that synchronicity, real or imagined, aside this was a proper crossword in my book, with a few words from the more secluded stretches of the dictionary, all fairly enough clued, some decidedly elusive definitions and a couple of entries where biffing the wrong answer was positively encouraged. Unusually, there’s no “hidden”, and no homophone, dodgy or not. I think I have it all, so here’s where I lay myself open to ridicule.

Across

1 BUFFET  Pound…
…or fare for travellers here, having in mind perhaps the travelling buffet on trains, which used to occupy an entire “car”.
5 SIT TIGHT Take no action
Which is what you get when (to) model, SIT, is given TIGHT, or drunk.
9 LIKE A CHARM  successfully
I wanted this to be something like “hold a torch”, interpreting the wrong definition, “care for”. Care for, however, gives LIKE, the retired old lady gives MA backwards, and she holds on to the CHAR, or cleaner.
10 PUJA  What Indian may observe
Puja is Sanskrit for worship, and can be either a festival or a particular religious duty. Backed up: PU; German agreement JA
11 NEW DELHI  city
New: unfamiliar, shop: DELI(catessen) and an inserted H(usband).
12 RELICT  Survivor
I know it as an antiquated/legal (same thing, in my book) term for for a widow, but aparently it has more contemporary ecological and geological meanings. The construction needs work: L(eft) is befind RE (on), I(sland) follows, then the two extremes of C(onfiden)T
13 MEGA  Huge
The setter is clearly keen to get in the “game of two halves” cliché, but the gist of the clue is that the two halves of GAME get switched
15 HYSTERIA  fit of madness
Your dodgy lawyer is a SHYSTER. Do what the clue says, decapitate (“the first thing we do” KHVI2) and add I (Roman) with A
18 TELEGRAM  message
One form of public transport is a TRAM: insert a E(uropean) LEG, member in its “limb” sense.
19 URGE  Egg on
A fast food item served endlessly is a (b)URGE(r)
21 GRAMPS Old relation
One of many affectionate terms for a grandparent. GPS, your (usually inaccessible) doctors, surround RAM (computer) memory.
23 LAST POST notes we hear on Armistice Day
Officer gives LT, and surrounds TO PASS “out”
25 ABUT  Touch
A simple reversal of TUBA
26 INTERWEAVE  blend
You have to gather in the material for an anagram: TEA + N(ame) + REVIEW
27 VERONESE  Italian
Lines: VERSE, include a single, for once ONE.
28 DOTING  Loving
One of many slang terms for money, TIN, is encased in DOG (to) trouble.

Down

2 UNITE  Bring together
A in French is UN, a couple is an ITEM, knock off the M(arried). I took (not married) to be the definition and biffed a rather unsatisfactory UNWED, enough to stymie me in the NW until revisited.
3 FIELDFARE singer
Wordplay components on approximate terms: range for FIELD, and FAR for decidedly (perhaps as in “It is a far, far better thing…”.). Add E(nglish)
4 TACKLE Deal with
I was convinced that this was going to begin with an S, given the reversed anmals, but the animals are actually the unlikely combination of ELK and CAT. It can happen
5 SPANISH OMELETTE  dish
“Milanese” pushes you in the direction of pasta/pizza, but it’s really anagram fodder, along with THE TOP. S(ucceeded) at the beginning completes the entry, otherwise known as a tortilla.
6 TAMARISK Tree
Last time this came up I essayed TAMARIND, which I duly did again on the basis of the MAR 1 (St David’s Day) ploy. But TASK (verb) is a better option for Commission than TIND. Every time.
7 IMPEL  drive
“This writer’s” can variously give me, my, and this time I’m. 3/4 of PEL(T) follows.
8 HIJACKING Seizure
Separate off “unlawful access” and translate it to HACKING, insert the otherwise unlikely looking 1 J(udge)
14 EXECRABLE Appalling
Times on this occasion doesn’t provide Ts but X, as in multiply. Place it in a re-collection of ERA CELEB.
16 EQUIPMENT 4 (as in TACKLE at 4d)
Ignore the comma in “say, funnily” and you get QUIP. fellows, MEN, follow and ET is once again the film that provides the setting.
17 PRISTINE  in perfect condition
I thought the bottom half had the seasier clues, and this is a case in point: a straighforward anagram of PIER ISN’T
20 ASTRID  girl abroad
The setter indicates we must look for a foreign female, saints preserve us. AS interprets “when” DIRT “scandal” which is “upset”. There, that wasn’t too difficult.
22 MATZO  bread
One of many spellings, Jewish rather overzealously unleavened bread. Aussie does for the OZ bit, flat gives TAME, which is cut off in its prime, and both are reversed or “rising”.
24 SEVEN  Cardinal (number)
Pick any one from erm… many. Lots. The last letter of virtues is S, then make “believe it or not” mean EVEN. I made the two expressions wave at each other briefly across the room, and then pressed the submit button.

33 comments on “26122 Something slightly spooky”

  1. I couldn’t get the bird; had the wordplay all right, finally, but got sick of running through the alphabet looking for possible 3-letter words meaning ‘decidedly’ (F being early in most alphabets, I probably passed through FAR without noticing). Not really convinced of far=decidely anyway. In retrospect, I’m just about positive we’ve had FIELDFARE before DNK PUJA, which I would have called Mephisto fodder if it hadn’t been so clearly clued.Rather neat that the MATZO clue involved ‘rising’, since of course matzo doesn’t rise.

    Edited at 2015-06-11 05:08 am (UTC)

  2. Thought I was pretty slow on this fairly straightforward puzzle, but a time of 1.25 Z8s, or less than two Verlaines is good for me.

    FIELDFARE entered with a shrug. Birds in crosswords are like politicians in Australia. We seem to have a lot more than we really need.

    Thanks setter and blogger.

  3. 23 seconds quicker than my target, but a careless ‘hysteric’ (won’t be the only one to fall for the ‘one with a fit of madness’ trip, I’m sure) was my ball-brushing-the-glove (even if the hand was off the bat) moment.

    Didn’t know MATZO – which looks disturbingly like Ryvita, one of my worst childhood memories. Nice puzzle – COD to GRAMPS.

  4. No time for this as I got stuck around 20 minutes in and nodded off, then this morning I forgot to record my starting time. I did find it quite hard, however. DK PUJA, and TAMARIND for TAMARISK led to a further hold-up, though I was pleased to remember St David’s day which has caught me out in the past.
  5. I was feeling quite pleased with my 14:04, and rather smug for having rethought my initial DATING at 28a. Aha! I thought. I’m not falling for that one.

    Unfortunately, it tuns out that, like ulaca, I did fall for the other one: HYSTERIC.

    I especially enjoyed RELICT among a number of goodies.

    Edited at 2015-06-11 06:52 am (UTC)

  6. Like Kevin I puzzled about FAR=Decidedly, but convinced myself rightly or wrongly that it was used in that sense in “By far and away” and also “Far out, man!”.
    I went for MAYO initially for 19a, for reasons best known to myself and “LIKE A DREAM” for 9a. My working for 22d was a truncated MATT for flat, but z8’s is much better – and correct of course.
    I didn’t know PUJA, though it was pretty clear from the clue.
    40 steadyish minutes.
    1. I went for LIKE A DREAM as well despite having the final A in place so ground to a sticky halt when I got as far as DRA… That confused me, I can tell you.
  7. Macavity apologises but he has been called to hospital for an urgent scan. Can someone please stand in for him today and blog the Quick puzzle and he will pick up their spot on another day.

    Many thanks

  8. 10:47 here, but a silly error. I gathered all the material for the anagram like Zabadak, then typed in INTERLEAVE. Where did that come from? The two aren’t exactly adjacent on the keyboard!
  9. Somewhere about 35 minutes, though I’ve forgotten the exact time at which the ipad clock stopped. This was the second day in the row where I wasn’t confident about finishing but came through in the end. I didn’t help myself by having INITE in 2D for most of this time, and so spent about 10 minutes poring over my final three. When FIELDFARE finally came to me, BUFFET and MEGA also fell straight away.

    To my mind this was another good crossword in what has been a good week. Thanks setters!

  10. 14:39. I seem to have been on the wavelength for this one, and I found it immensely enjoyable. Obscure words fairly clued, cunningly hidden definitions, just the sort of thing I like.
    Mind you I misread 22dn and interpreted the first three letters as a shortening of TAMP, rather than TAME, so in reality I suppose I simply did not finish.
    Thanks setter.

  11. … and that One Error is of course (drum roll) hysteric. Not sure I’d have thought of ‘shyster’ though, even if I’d taken longer. As it was, this was my LOI after I’d parsed TAMARISK, and changed the ‘nd’ to ‘SK’.

    Other than that, all ok, but I too was held up by LIKE A dream’ for a little while.

    I always have a mental block spelling NEW DELHI, and true to form, it went in as NEW dehli, until I saw TACKLE. Odd, as I have been to the Indian capital many times, once for an unplanned extended stay when we were stranded there en famille as a result of the 2010 ash cloud. Maybe that’s why PUJA was familiar to me, and was in fact my FOI. As I intimated in a late post yesterday, I often end up with mombles, maybe as a result of a limited vocabulary, so it’s interesting to see that PUJA is unfamiliar to more experienced solvers.

    About 45mins or so.

  12. 31:55, so about average for me. I made a bizarre mistake putting in the Russian rather than German for yes in 10a in initially… which made 8d a puzzle until I spotted what I’d done. (Yes. PUJA was a new word for me.) I was also a bit dubious about EVEN for ‘believe it or not’ in 24d until I realised it was also referring to the 7 deadly sins. I liked the 2 animals in 4d – and thanks for the link to the story z8. Thanks setter too for a nice puzzle.
  13. 12:50 with the bird and the buffet going in last. No problems with the ending of hysteria as I saw the ‘one with a’ straight away.
  14. This was the second word this week that I got from Jewel in the Crown – the other was CANTONMENT. Daphne and Hari – the star-crossed lovers – visit a temple to make PUJA and have the red waxy print placed on their foreheads. I thought this was a very well-put-together puzzle, and thank goodness no unforced errors today. 19.29. P.S. What was that about New Yorkers not meeting you halfway yesterday Keriothe? I’m sorry to hear that…. Mind you you’re not wrong!
    1. I was just teasing really, but the kernel of truth I was driving at is that (in business at least) New Yorkers can be more, um robustly confident in their way of doing things and therefore less open to alternatives. This is of course a gross generalisation and equally true of many other people, not least Brits.
  15. All finished in about half an hour, with a further few minutes parsing the biffed entries, and changing HYSTERIC to HYSTERIA. Nice puzzle.
  16. 11 mins. I must have been in the same room as the setter, never mind the same wavelength, to have posted a time faster than Sue. I could be way off base here, but from a sample of a handful of past puzzles, none of which I can tell you the number of, there’s a particular setter I seem to find easier than some of you, and it wouldn’t surprise me if this was one of his/hers. Anyway, I saw all the definitions and their parsings, the only answer I don’t remember coming across before was PUJA which was entered from wordplay alone, and the DOTING/ASTRID crossers were my last ones in. I did have to double-check the anagram fodder for INTERWEAVE just to make sure it wasn’t “interleave”. It must be an Andy thing.
      1. I’m afraid not. Maybe one year, but not at the moment. It would be good to meet a few of you some time in the future so I can put names and faces to avatars.
  17. 25:18 for what I though was a decidedly tricky puzzle, made more so by what I see as the naughty inclusion of a couple of bits of padding to make the solver (well me) look for unnecessary elements to include (“one” in 18 and “met” in 6).

    For a while I thought I might not actually finish and was panicking about the SW corner where I thought I might need something from Norse mythology or similar for the old relation (as in the telling of a tale) and some Australian slang for an apartment to get the required bread.

    No problems getting the right ending on hysteria but I did have tamarind in for a time.

  18. 27 mins of slow but steady solving. My last two were also the bird and buffet.
  19. Around 30 minutes, ending with FIELDFARE from the crossing letters at last suggesting what the wordplay meant. FAR wasn’t particularly helpful there, to get the Eurocentric bird, which we don’t have. The picture seems to be similar to what we call a wood thrush. DNK PUJA, no siree, but everything else was OK. Regards to all.
  20. After good golf and a horrendous no-power thunderstorm before sitting down to take 25 minutes or so at this. All done and enjoyed, with PUJA just BIFW and FIELDFARE not a problem.
  21. 11:30 for me. If only I didn’t start so ridiculously slowly, I might still post some decent times. Today I suspect I must have taken around 9 minutes to battle my way through half the clues before polishing off the other half in 2 or 3 minutes.

    No problem with PUJA. I’m not sure where I first came across the word, but I suspect it might be in one of Satyajit Ray’s films.

    An interesting and enjoyable puzzle.

  22. I’m too ashamed to even consider revealing that this took me 103 minutes. I went completely wordblind at BUFFET, which was my NTLOI (followed by FIELDFARE). But prior to that I was just phenomenally slow.

    I’m also amongst the HYSTERICs (taking the “with” to be the terminal “C”). Since one can colloquially “have hysterics”, I think it’s a somewhat valid answer and, if it’s open to argument, it’s a sloppy clue.

    NHO PUJA, and was lucky to have heard of MATZO.

  23. Think about 90 minutes for me and very pleased as without doubt this is the hardest one I’ve managed to complete correctly. A number of unheard or half remembered words but nothing (for my ability) unfairly clued. Now if I could only get these times down…
    1. Congratulations on a fine milestone: this was undoubtedly a bit of a beast and tripped up many of our company along the way. It’s an achievement just to complete it without mistakes. My pride in so doing was shattered on the very next crossword, where I submitted a modern-era record of 5 fat finger errors. Now if only I could learn to type…
  24. We take these crosswords at a very leisurely pace. Anyway, we had two clues left to solve (BUFFET and FIELDFARE) and I noticed that the puzzle could possibly be a pangram, but with no F visible. So I tried putting an F into the _ U _ _ _ T … and that did it 🙂 I was surprised to find that these last two words provided three F’s.

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