Quick Cryptic #3306 by Mara

 

Oh my. At 4:20 pm California time this afternoon (12:20 am UK time), the Times app on my phone still wasn’t showing the “Crossword Club” tile, which is where I normally solve these. I reluctantly pulled out the laptop, even though I don’t know how to use the web interface very well. So I was all discombobulated when I started solving this one. Things did not get better for me from there on.

As I have mentioned in previous blogs, anagrams are my least favourite type of clue, and we have a bumper helping today, including both the answers that span the grid.

As well as the anagrams, I struggled today with clues that on other days would have been fast: SHERRY, TUDOR, BREAST and BOREDOM were among the culprits.

My last one in – by a mile – was AMERICA (where I live, d’oh! – although no-one here actually calls the country “America”). I had a total brain freeze, and after my time went over the 30 minute mark, I allowed myself to look at Chambers’ Word Wizard, which told me there were no words that match A_E_I_A. Well, thanks a bunch, Chambers. After that I started trying to remember fictional countries, until in desperation I turned to the bloggers’ WhatsApp group, where I got the answer in seconds.

Ultimate time: 32:56, one of my slowest times ever, and almost definitely the slowest when I’ve been writing the blog. Sometime you just have one of those days.

I wasn’t so grumpy that I didn’t think about a Clue of Day: my vote goes to NUMBER, because I do like a good pun.

Apologies if this is all self-indulgent “oh poor me”-ing. But everyone struggles sometimes, even those of us who write these columns. And to those of you who check whether you were faster than the blogger, you’re welcome 😉.

Definitions underlined, synonyms in round brackets, wordplay in square brackets and deletions in strikethrough. Anagram indicators italicised in the clue, anagram fodder indicated like (THIS)*.

Across
1 Pull dependant back (4)
DRAW – WARD (dependent), reversed [back].
3 Scholar’s account interrupted by media broadcast (8)
ACADEMIC – ACC (account) containing [interrupted by] (MEDIA)*.
9 Old and short, quite wrinkled (7)
ANTIQUE – ANd [AND short], plus (QUITE)*.
10 Jargon in advance written on back of manual (5)
LINGO – IN (from the clue) and GO (advance) after the last letter [back of] manuaL.
11 Vessel in amphora, or tankard (5)
AORTA – Hidden in amphorA OR TAnkard.

A blood vessel, of course.

12 Fluff found in modest drink (6)
SHERRY – ERR (fluff, as in lines) in SHY (modest).
14 Ultimate ban on rocky peak that’s flat (5,8)
TABLE MOUNTAIN – (ULTIMATE BAN ON)*.

I spotted that “peak’s that flat” has 13 letters, so spent too long trying to make that anagram work. Once I got the N from NUMBER I realized that couldn’t be right. But did I ever bother counting the letters in “ultimate ban on”? I did not.

17 For example, some chicken run circled by wild animal (6)
BREAST – R for run (cricket), contained in [circled by] BEAST (wild animal).

I think “For example” at the start just makes this clue harder by adding another piece that looks like a cryptic element but ends up having to be part of the definition.

19 Bird beginning to make a raucous cry (5)
MACAW – first letter [beginning] of Make, plus A, plus CAW (raucous cry).
22 Strange tour taking in back of terraced house (5)
TUDOR – (TOUR)* containing the last letter [back] of terraceD.

As in House of Tudor. Which took me a long time to spot.

23 Country  song featured in musical (7)
AMERICA –  double definition. The second definition is a reference to the song from West Side Story.

Oh dear oh dear. I spent 10 minutes gazing at A_E_I_A with nothing coming to mind. As mentioned above, the bloggers’ WhatsApp group came up trumps for me: many thanks to glheard.

I was so convinced this would be a word for “song” contained in the name of a musical that I never even considered the possibility of a double definition.

24 Revolutionary made it with no control (8)
DOMINATE – (MADE IT NO)*
25 Everything going past bat originally — for example, a bouncer (4)
BALL – ALL (everything) after Bat [originally].

A bouncer is a type of delivery in cricket.

Down
1 Tarnished tin made a shiny material (8)
DIAMANTE – (TIN MADE A)*.
2 Remove top of beam later (5)
AFTER – Follow the instruction and remove the top of rAFTER (beam).
4 Cook at once sees hot snack (6,2,5)
CHEESE ON TOAST – (AT ONCE SEES HOT)*

Clever anagram, but to be honest I had had my fill of anagrams by this point.

5 Five hundred pixies shortened burrow (5)
DELVE – D (five hundred in Roman numerals), plus ELVEs [shortened].

That’s the verb sense of “burrow”, as a rabbit does.

6 Main rock almost formed island (7)
MINORCA – (MAIN ROCk)* [“almost” is the instruction to drop the K].
7 Animal scoffing hot dog (4)
CHOW – COW containing [scoffing] H for hot.
8 Fuddy-duddy in shape (6)
SQUARE – Double definition, the first being perhaps slightly dated.
13 Mushroom, advocaat and lemonade (8)
SNOWBALL – Another double definition.

My first thought on reading this clue: “Ugh, what a terrible recipe.”

15 State showing little interest in colour during time of prosperity (7)
BOREDOM – RED (color) during BOOM (time of prosperity).
16 One, perhaps, is less sensitive (6)
NUMBER – Another double definition.

This time it is “number” in the sense of “more numb”, but also watch out for “number” to mean “anaesthetic” or “anaesthetist”.

18 Protective garment worn regularly after month in spring (5)
APRON – APR (standard abbreviation for April), and then wOrN [regularly].
20 Strike beginning to affect country (5)
CHINA – CHIN (strike), plus Affect [beginning to…].
21 Learning, no end, for macho man (4)
STUD – STUDy [no end…].

A pair of mirror image clues to finish the downs.

80 comments on “Quick Cryptic #3306 by Mara”

  1. I’m a slow solver, though I do usually finish, but I have never completed a puzzle in less time than the blogger – nowhere near – so feel enormously cheered today. I didn’t time myself, but I know that it was just under the half-hour. My LOI was CHINA, which had to be, but I DNK chin=strike.

    Many thanks to Doofenschmirtz and Mara

  2. 12:56. I took far longer than I should have. SHERRY and AMERICA were my LOIs and held me up several minutes. Nice puzzle, which I definitely wasn’t on the wavelength for.

  3. 19:36 after running around all over the shop! Just about to order my SHERRY in the SCC when I thought to lift and separate “modest drink”. Initially miscounted the anagrist at 4d so thought I couldn’t have TOAST with it, though happily (if incorrectly) assumed AMERICA is a song in Hamilton & alphabet trawled to change DRAG at the last minute.

    Like others, I really appreciate a blogger of such standing, and newer solvers such as Offput, sharing times and experiences. A few years ago (before I knew of the blog) I would spend several hours revisiting one like this, then use the solution the following evening to work out what I’d missed…

    Thanks to this lovely place, (blood) vessels, “and short(-ened)” & puns (NUMBER) suggest themselves more readily.

    Big thanks to Mara & especially Doofers!

  4. I found this QC tough, but fair.
    It took me 31:09 to complete, all parsed.
    Thank you, Mara and Doofers.

  5. Well into the SCC at 22:14, but in my defence I’m in the aftermath of my birthday celebrations, having racked up a half-century today. I’m frankly amazed that I can see my monitor, much less distinguish individual letters. Well done Mara – you win this one, but let’s try again when you’re on the wrong side of a dozen margaritas.

    Thank you for the blog!

  6. It was a stinker. More like a regular cryptic then a quick. BREAST was hard, LINGO and AMERICA super hard to parse (though biffable). I got stuck on DRAW for ages too (thought it was DRAG, but what is a GARD?

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