I finally got around to solving this on the train on the way home on Wednesday night, having already seen from a few comments that it was a tough one. 44:02, so it was right up there! But there was nothing unfair, and only one obscure word really (which I knew anyway), so all the difficulty came from the extreme craftiness of the definitions and wordplay, of which there are too many examples to list. Brilliant puzzle!
| Across |
| 1 |
DART – hidden reversed in “extremist radio” |
| 3 |
DROP A BRICK – OP (surgery) + AB (muscle) + RICK (strain), all after DR (doctor). |
| 10 |
SOFT TOP – SO (it follows) + FT (newspaper) + TOP (chief). |
| 11 |
WARLIKE – WAKE (aftermath) around R,L (opposite sides) + I (one). |
| 12 |
SILENCE IS GOLDEN – (GIs license)* + OLDEN (ancient). |
| 13 |
DISMAL – DIAL (face) around SM (sergeant major = warrant officer). |
| 14 |
POWER CUT – POUT (sullen expression) around CREW reversed (men on reflection). |
| 17 |
SLAM DUNK – LAD (youth) around M(arks), inside SUNK (doomed). |
| 18 |
SCIPIO – SCIP (sounds like “skip” (pass over)) + IO (a moon of Jupiter). Roman general who defeated Hannibal. |
| 21 |
YOU NEVER CAN TELL – “YOU NEVER CAN, TELL!” ref. William Tell, who is forced to shoot an apple from his son’s head. |
| 23 |
HOME RUN – HOME (British PM Sir Alec Douglas HOME) + RUN (managed). |
| 24 |
PRETEEN – PREEN (groom) around E.T. (visitor from afar). |
| 25 |
NATURALIST – (Australian)* inside NT. |
| 26 |
STIR – double definition. |
| Down |
| 1 |
DISUSED – D(aughter) + I (one) + SUSSED (grasped) minus one of the middle letters. |
| 2 |
RAFFLESIA – RAFFLE (fund-raising event) + IS reversed + A. A Malaysian plant known for having the largest single bloom in the world, up to a metre across. |
| 4 |
RAPPER – sounds like “wrapper”. |
| 5 |
PAWNSHOP – PAWNS (security men) + HOP (dance). |
| 6 |
BAR-CODE SCANNER – (record bean cans)* |
| 7 |
IVIED – I (one) + VIED (struggled). |
| 8 |
KEEPNET – TEN (a number) + PEEK (secretly look), all reversed. |
| 9 |
STANDARD-BEARER – BEAR (yield) inside (red star and)*. |
| 15 |
CO-PRESENT – COP (policeman) + R.E. (soldiers) + SENT (dispatched). |
| 16 |
INFERNAL – INFER (reason) + first letters of Nuns Are Loudly. |
| 17 |
SAY WHEN – cryptic definition, ref. pouring tea. |
| 19 |
ONLINER – ONE-LINER (joke), without the first E (drug). |
| 20 |
SCOPES – COPE (cloak) inside S,S (seconds). |
| 22 |
UNMET – “U.N. MET”, Manhattan being the UN headquarters. |
I did think the clue for ‘soft top’ was rather clever. It took me a while to see how it worked after writing in the answer from the literal and the checkers.
16d sums it up nicely!
Edited at 2013-10-12 07:28 am (UTC)
Yes, a really chewy puzzle and very rewarding to solve correctly. I didn’t know the plant or the RAPPER/MC association (having an aversion to “music” of that type).
Edited at 2013-10-12 06:25 am (UTC)
http://www.theanswerbank.co.uk/Quizzes-and-Puzzles/Crosswords/Question1280752.html (not my post)
I got rapper after an hour to avoid the bagel . I usually get between 1/2 and 2/3 .
Very hard -which isn’t a complaint -just a grading.
There aren’t many puzzles in which I haven’t solved a single clue after my first read-through. I’m a big fan of US sports so I’m a bit annoyed that it took me so long to see SLAM DUNK and HOME RUN. RAPPER was my LOI after SCIPIO and STIR. As Andy said in his blog, the difficulty for those not on the setter’s wavelength was because of the crafty definitions and wordplay. Excellent puzzle.
Interestingly, like most Latin words starting sc-, Scipio can also be pronounced Seepio.
Luckily today’s puzzle has cheered me up no end.