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 Minot |
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 | BLISS – Sir 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!” |
Your respite hasn’t lasted very long Linxit. Today’s is altogether much tougher!
I do admit that ‘unthinkingly’ amused me as well, although it took me a surprisingly long time to come up with.
Now Sir Arthur Bliss, there’s a composer you don’t hear of every day. I wonder how many solvers could name a work by him? I can only think of the incidental music to ‘Things to Come’.
That’s the trouble with these week-later blogs, it’s just not fresh in your mind any more.
On a scale of 1 to 10, I gave UNTHINKINGLY an 11.