An enjoyable offering from Grumpy which I thought was just about right for a QC – nothing obscure, a few splashes of wit and it kept you on your toes throughout.
As usual, definitions underlined: DD = double definition: anagrams indicated by *(–)
| Across |
| 1 |
Hard wood needed for steering apparatus (4) |
|
HELM – H (abbrev. hard) + ELM (wood) |
| 4 |
Church one left in no-frills area (8) |
|
BASILICA – I (one) + L (left) ‘in’ BASIC (no-frills) + A (abbrev. area) |
| 8 |
Birds fight – and quarrels following (8) |
|
SPARROWS – SPAR (fight) ‘followed’ by ROWS (quarrels) |
| 9 |
Initially burglars always like doors without locks (4) |
|
BALD – First letters (initially) of Burglars Always Like Doors, and a jokey cryptic definition |
| 10 |
Some stock needed for joint (4) |
|
KNEE – Hidden (indicated by ‘some’) in stocK NEEded |
| 11 |
“A powerful feller!” Bond observed (8) |
|
CHAINSAW – CHAIN (bond) + SAW (observed). Very droll! |
| 12 |
Eel was terribly slippery character (6) |
|
WEASEL – *(EEL WAS) with “terribly” as the anagrind |
| 14 |
Poles with stake in French city (6) |
|
NANTES – ANTE (stake – as in “up the ante”) ‘in’ N + S (poles) |
| 16 |
After bad scare finish climb again (8) |
|
REASCEND – *(SCARE) – with “bad” as the anagrind – followed by (after) END (finish) |
| 18 |
Duck leaves lake (4) |
|
TEAL – TEA (leaves) + L (abbrev. lake) |
| 19 |
Turn back extremely rude monster (4) |
|
OGRE – GO (turn) reversed (back) + RE (first and last letters – ‘extremely’ – of RudE) |
| 20 |
Tremendous performance opposed by Conservative (8) |
|
GIGANTIC – GIG (performance) + ANTI (opposed) + C (abbrev. Conservative). Nice word sum type clue. |
| 22 |
The early shifts tough (8) |
|
LEATHERY – *(THE EARLY) with “shifts” as the anagrind |
| 23 |
Rational as painter ignoring the odds (4) |
|
SANE – Every other letter (ignoring the odds) of aS pAiNtEr |
| Down |
| 2 |
Stretch of river occupied by vessels (7) |
|
EXPANSE – EXE (river) ‘occupied’ by PANS (vessels – of the cooking variety) |
| 3 |
Mix gallons in pool (5) |
|
MERGE – MERE (pool) with G (abbrev. gallons) ‘in’ it |
| 4 |
Frightening word that’s repeated in error (3) |
|
BOO – …because a BOO BOO is an ‘error’ |
| 5 |
Bore throwing nuts aside (9) |
|
SUSTAINED – *(NUTS ASIDE) with “throwing” as the anagrind |
| 6 |
The French outlaw taking on a country (7) |
|
LEBANON – LE (‘the French’) + BAN (outlaw) + (‘taking’) ON |
| 7 |
Girl from outskirts of Liverpool grabbed by US agency (5) |
|
CILLA – LL (edges – ‘outskirts’ – of LiverpooL) inside (‘grabbed by’) CIA (US agency) |
| 11 |
Fellow worker in company left union (9) |
|
COLLEAGUE – CO (abbrev. company) + L (left) + LEAGUE (union) |
| 13 |
Dodgy American pastor’s leader in religious group (7) |
|
SUSPECT – US (American) + P (Pastor’s leader – i.e. first letter) ‘in’ SECT (religious group) |
| 15 |
Great joy when family member doesn’t start (7) |
|
ELATION – {R}ELATION (family member) without its first letter (doesn’t start) |
| 17 |
High-flier that’s below par (5) |
|
EAGLE – Golf terminology – an eagle being two below par (never got one myself… yet!) |
| 18 |
Day without commencement of night music (5) |
|
TUNES – TUES (abbrev. Tuesday – ‘day’) goes around the outside of (‘without’) N (first letter – ‘commencement’ – of Night) |
| 21 |
Make fun of man (3) |
|
GUY – Straightforward DD (provided you are familiar with the slightly old school usage of ‘to guy’ meaning to tease) |
But well done anyway.
A nicely balanced offering, with enough to interest the seasoned solver, and introduction to techniques for the less experienced. Just what the quickie should be imho.
PlayupPompey
How about: I bore the hunger by eating ants. I sustained the thirst by drinking from the lake. I suffered a Bear Grylls program last night.
CoD 11a for me, but 9a worth an audible chuckle.
Was held up at the end by the 18a / 18d pair of TEAL and TUNES.
I really do not think “without” is correctly used in 18d. If it were “Commencement of night without day music”, that would make sense. But the clue as it stands does not.
Edited at 2016-05-20 01:00 am (UTC)
1854 A. C. Mowatt Autobiogr. Actress xv. 227 Good gracious! the audience will guy you!.. ‘Guy me? What do you mean by guy?’.. ‘Why, laugh at you, to be sure—and chaff you!’
1869 ‘M. Twain’ Innocents Abroad xxvi. 278 The Roman street-boy who..guyed the gladiators from the dizzy gallery.
1885 J. K. Jerome On Stage 151, I particularly remember..being ‘guyed’ on one occasion… The stage manager insisted on my wearing a most outrageous costume. I knew it would be laughed at.
1890 Lit. World 11 July 20 Mr. Burnand does not set himself to guy the book.
1890 A. Conan Doyle Sign of Four (ed. 3) vii. 116 I’m guyed at by the children.
1890 J. Jefferson Autobiogr. 219 With all this at stake, some wanton actor deliberately ‘guys’ his part and overturns the patient care of his comrade.
1893 Scribner’s Mag. Sept. 384/2 She and Edith Merry had been studying Anglo-Saxon together, and he had guyed them both about it, calling them blue-stockings.
1895 W. Archer Theatr. ‘World’ 1894 xliii. 287 Larking and guying on the stage are my abhorrence.
1898 J. Hollingshead Gaiety Chron. x. 414 The actors, I am bound to say, treated this curious fossil of dramatic protection with more than proper respect, and did not ‘guy’ the parts allotted to them.
1906 Daily Chron. 31 Oct. 5/5 We must make an end of that disgusting blunder of guying them [sc. arrested suffragettes] up in hideous prison uniforms.
1963 Times 27 May 8/2 Francoise Sagan, British phlegmatism and many other picturesque aspects of contemporary life in the 1960s are gently but tellingly guyed by Mr. Kohout.
1970 G. Greer Female Eunuch 328 Vociferous women are guyed in the press.
Edited at 2016-05-18 10:53 pm (UTC)
Sticker was chainsaw, I get bond+observed = chain+saw, but how on earth to you get a link between a powerful feller and a chainsaw