Saturday Times 24329 (12 Sep)

Solving time 10:27. A bit of light relief for me after the strain of blogging a run of really tricky Saturday puzzles. Still, there was not much wrong with this apart from being at the easier end of the spectrum, and 26A was brilliant.

Across
1 HEAVENLY BODY – double definition, cryptically referring to topless models appearing in the pages of certain tabloids.
9 AMASS – AS (when) around MAS.
10 TELEPHONE – (help)* + ON (acting) inside TEE. “Use this” is a bit weak as the definition though.
11 SPACE AGE – SAGE around PACE.
12 FRIDGE – F(ine) + RIDGE
13 TEETHING – cryptic definition.
15 AURORA – hidden in MinotAUR OR Ariadne
17 OFF PAT – OFF + PAT
18 COME INTO – C + (emotion)*
20 SONATA – SON AT A
21 PUNDITRY – IT in DR, all inside PUNY
24 FETTUCINI – CUTTE(r) reversed in FINI.
25 BLISSSir Arthur Bliss, and the saying “ignorance is bliss”, which is originally a phrase from the poem Ode on a Distant Prospect of Eton College by Thomas Gray.
26 UNTHINKINGLY – UNTHIN + KINGLY. Easily my COD – made me laugh anyway.

Down
1 HEADSET – DEAD SET with the first D changed to H.
2 AT A RATE OF KNOTS – (a tanker too fast)*. The word “thus” at the end prevents it from being a true &lit, but it’s still a good anagram.
3 ENSUE – ENSU(r)E
4 LITIGANT – (a tilting)*. Nice use of “courtly” there, taking us back to the Age of Chivalry.
5 BALD – first letters of “Blunt And Lacking Delicacy”.
6 DEPARTURE – double definition.
7 GOOD-FOR-NOTHING – turn OUT into GUT by replacing O for G.
8 GENEVA – (avenge)*
14 HEARTBURN – HEAR (try) + TURN (fit of illness) around B(ergamot).
16 LOCUTION – O + CUT inside LION (the international rugby team is the British Lions).
17 OSSIFY – first and last letters of “OwnerS ShanghaI FactorY”.
19 ODYSSEY – O(ld) + DYE around SS + Y(ear).
22 DUBAI – DUB A1
23 HIGH – “Hi!”

6 comments on “Saturday Times 24329 (12 Sep)”

  1. Yes, an easy one after a good run of Saturday puzzles. I also choked on my toast as I tried to laugh and eat at the same time with our favourite Tudor monarch.

    Your respite hasn’t lasted very long Linxit. Today’s is altogether much tougher!

  2. Another vote for UNTHINKINGLY as a cracker, but also AT A RATE OF KNOTS and GOOD-FOR-NOTHING. The latter held me up for some time because I marked the grid 5-3-6 and couldn’t think what to make of the clue except violin strings were made of gut, so GOODY-OWN-STRING was about all that would fit. Strangely, I had never heard of that expression. Also was puzzled by TELEPHONE, which I think was my 2nd last in, along with BALD. You could see I was having a bad day.
  3. I’m told that the clue for 10a was supposed to be connected to 9a (When to ring mothers collect …), and so should have started “… use this”.

    On a scale of 1 to 10, I gave UNTHINKINGLY an 11.

  4. Thank you for that; 10’s connection with 9 would make much more sense of it. Knowing that the online version has trouble reproducing ellipses at the start of a clue, I should have been more alert to the possibility. On any other day, I may have been.

Comments are closed.