Saturday Times 24407

Sorry for the lack of a placeholder earlier. Third weekend in a row of working, and today I was running late. Great puzzle though, one of the best this year I thought. I’ll do it justice on the train on the way home and post it when I get home.

Actually, I’ve sort of changed my mind about this one now I’ve looked at it again. Last Saturday when I solved it I was blown away by its brilliance, but today doing the blog I just thought it had a few really good clues, most of the rest about average, and a couple of fillers. No comments yet because of the lateness of the placeholder no doubt, so unfortunately I have no idea yet of how others found it. Apologies to the setter for making his day then snatching it away again!

Across
1 SAFE SEAT – cryptic definition, and a good one too.
6 PRESTO – (finge)R inside PESTO. No reason why the “tip”
of a word shouldn’t be the last letter, although 99% of the time it indicates the first letter.
9 MISHAP – hidden in “bleMISH: A Pimple”.
10 ENSHRINE – SH + R inside E(dwardian) NINE (a square).
11 FERN – N(ew) + REF (whistle-blower), all reversed.
12 ABOVE-NAMED – A.B. + OVEN + A(re) + MED.
14 WIRELESS – WILES (devices) + S(ucceeded), around RE (note).
16 POSH – (hops)*
18 JOKE – JOE around K(ing).
19 FOLLOWER – O(ld) + L(iberal) inside FLOWER.
21 MONTSERRAT – T(emperature) + ARREST (run in) + N(ew) + O.M. (Order), all reversed.
22 ROLE – R(io) + OLĂ©. Good example of a “lift and separate”.
24 DIATRIBE – TRIBE after DIA(l).
26 PEANUT – P(ast)E + TUNA rev.
27 DENGUE – DUE around ENG.
28 ROSIE LEE – (See Loire)*

Down
2 ALIVE – V inside A LIE.
3 ENHANCEMENT – (henna)* + CEMENT
4 EMPHASES – EM (length of dash) + PHASES.
5 THE WORSE FOR WEAR – (He forswore water)*. Great anagram.
6 PASTEL – S(ari) inside PATEL.
7 EAR – alternate letters of Le Havre.
8 TENNESSEE – TEN-NESS (decimal state, <groan>) + E(astern) +
E(uropean).
13 APPROPRIATE – A + PP (very soft) + (painkille)R + [R(esistance) inside OPIATE]. Definition is “take”.
15 IRON OXIDE – IRE around [O(ld) + DIXON reversed]. Dixon of Dock Green was a police series which ran from the 50s to the 70s. Younger and overseas solvers might have struggled with that one.
17 PLATYPUS – (supply at)*
20 CERISE – RISE underneath C.E.
23 LOUSE – U (posh) inside LOSE.
25 TUG – GUT (instinctive) reversed.

8 comments on “Saturday Times 24407”

  1. Dixon of Dock Green was a police series which ran from the 50s to the 70s. Younger and overseas solvers might have struggled with that one.

    This overseas solver has learned to take such things on faith, for better or worse. “Hm. Old TV bobby. There must’ve been a show with a policeman named Dixon. Moving on.”

  2. I must have been having a bad day last Saturday. Having dug out the puzzle again I find I gave up after an hour and resorted to aids with five clues still unsolved at 4dn, 5dn,12ac,14ac and 24ac and several queries on answers found but not explained.

    As might have been expected I didn’t have any problems thinking of George Dixon (Evenin’ all) but I cannot believe that I failed to spot WIRELESS.

  3. Well, since I got it, I suppose I should count my blessings, but I feel like more than groaning. I mean, ‘tenness’ is not only not a word, I don’t see how it could be a word, any more than, say ‘bookness’ or ‘dogness’.
    And–I know I’m going to be embarrassed by the answer, but– could someone explain nine=square?
  4. How was it for me? I can’t say that the earth moved but I enjoyed the experience. I thought it was much as you described it having done the blog with some good stuff, some reasonable average fare and as you say the odd filler. It took me about 25 minutes. I quite enjoyed “ten-ness” and square=nine, but then I would wouldn’t I.

    Mind how you go.

  5. As an overseas solver I found ‘safe seat’ a lot harder than Officer Dixon. Can’t complain as long as state names like ‘Tennessee’ are thrown in.

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