Greetings from Canada. Actually as I write this I am sitting at home in London, but by the time I post it I will be sitting beside a lake in Muskoka nursing a Caesar, or possibly a Creemore, listening to the call of the loons and saying ‘eh’ at every available opportunity.
The last time I blogged an Anax puzzle it was a rather gentle affair. My time for this one of 23:43 includes both solving the puzzle and dealing with a child who had managed to wee on his own shorts (sorry I don’t have an acronym for that), so it’s hard to be sure but I think this was a notch trickier, even if it’s clearly not up there with the toughest of Dean’s creations. There are some nice clues in here, as you’d expect, but also a generous helping of simple clues that are nonetheless models of elegance and efficiency. All in all an enjoyable solve.
| Across |
| 1 |
Bitter cold – needs help dressing |
|
ACID – C (cold)in AID. Simple but elegant. |
| 4 |
Ornament with cross given to a torturer
|
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TORQUEMADA – According to Chambers, a TORQUE is a ‘necklace or armband in the form of a twisted metal band’. I didn’t know that, but you don’t really have to. It’s followed by MAD (‘cross’) and then A to get to the pseudonym of the renowned crossword setter Edward Powys Mathers, who set advanced cryptics in the Observer from 1926 until his death in 1939. He was succeeded by Derek McNutt, who set puzzles under the pseudonym ‘Ximenes’ and gave his (pseudo)name to an entire school of thought in crossword setting. In 1972 Ximenes was succeeded by Jonathan Crowther, who under the alias ‘Azed’ still sets barred grid puzzles to an incredibly high and consistent standard in the Observer, along with a clue competition in which my occasional entries have achieved a consistent standard of abject failure. TORQUEMADA, Ximenes and Deza were all notable figures in the Spanish Inquisition. |
| 9 |
Run around academy and trace compound
|
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WOLFRAMITE – FLOW (run) is reversed, then followed by the Royal Academy (RA) and MITE to give ‘an iron manganese tungstate mineral that is the intermediate between ferberite (Fe2+ rich) and huebernite (Mn2+ rich)’, obvs. To me it sounds like a term for an evil lawyer. |
| 10 |
What’s left behind |
|
RUMP – DD. Simple but elegant. |
| 11 |
Doctor is taken across river in part of Eastern Cape
|
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TRANSKEI – an anagram of IS TAKEN around R for ‘river’. This region in South Africa rang a bell, but only faintly. I didn’t know the volcano that crosses it at 5dn so in the end these two answers went in as a bit of a combined leap of faith, but the wordplay was sufficiently clear for me to feel reasonably confident. |
| 12 |
Rather nice |
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PRETTY – DD: simple but elegant. |
| 13 |
Warships, those pounding Jersey and Guernsey after initial exchanges |
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BATTLECRUISERS – Jerseys and Guernseys are cows, so someone pounding them would be a CATTLEBRUISER. Cheeky. |
| 15 |
Celebration put on ice? |
|
DIAMOND JUBILEE – not sure about this. Is it an &lit with ‘celebration’ for JUBILEE added to ‘ice’ for DIAMOND, and the whole thing alluding to a celebration that has been ‘put on ice’ for the foreseeable future (it certainly seems unlikely that Charles will celebrate his)? Or is it just a cryptic definition? Either way the answer’s pretty clear so I don’t think we need the Spanish Inquisition. |
| 18 |
Said condition’s beginning to deteriorate |
STATED – STATE (condition), DETERIORATE. Simple but elegant. |
| 19 |
Job – I refuse it – is work in retirement |
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POSITION – reversal (‘in retirement’) of NO (I refuse), IT, IS, OP (work). |
| 21 |
Sound made by worn-out reptile
|
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CROC – Sounds like ‘crock’. A ‘crock’ is a ‘person or thing, such as a car, that is old or decrepit’, according to Collins, but I can’t find any support for its use as an adjective, which seems to be required. It wasn’t a meaning I knew anyway so it didn’t bother me while solving. |
| 22 |
I’m turned into coal once fluid is cheap. |
|
ECONOMICAL – I’M reversed into an anagram of COAL ONCE. |
| 23 |
Winner’s characteristic in opposition
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FACE-TO-FACE – or FACET OF ACE. A devilishly clever clue, which I confess I didn’t understand when I put the answer in: it just seemed like the only possibility. The penny only dropped an hour or two later when I went back to it. For a while I thought that this would have something to do with cards: a reference to the way the king/queen/jack face on the, er, face of the card, perhaps. It turns out to be a clue about tennis, where an ACE is a ‘winner’. |
| 24 |
Dislike adult being in the wrong |
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HATE – A (adult) in an anagram of THE. Simple but elegant. |
| Down |
| 2 |
Short piece of work introducing one set of singers
|
CHOIR – I in CHORE. Elegant but simple. |
| 3 |
The intricate cracks in soil |
|
DEFINITE ARTICLE – anagram of INTRICATE in DEFILE. Simple, but… enough of that, eh? Nice clue. |
| 4 |
Background music as listed item to put on tape |
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TRACK RECORD – TRACK here is ‘music as listed item’ because it would be part of the track listing on an album (remember those?), then ‘put on tape’ (remember those?) is RECORD. |
| 5 |
This is more likely to pour down volcano |
|
RAINIER – DD. The weather-related part of this was sufficiently obvious that I didn’t need to know that Mount RAINIER is ‘a massive stratovolcano located 54 miles southeast of Seattle in the state of Washington, United States’. I also didn’t need to know that a stratovolcano is ‘a volcano consisting of alternating layers of ash and lava’. One does learn things from doing these puzzles, doesn’t one? |
| 6 |
Exploit university place without it |
USE – U, SITE. I promise this is the last time I will say ‘simple but elegant’. |
| 7 |
Real men fancy slim, wealthy actress
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MARLENE DIETRICH – an anagram of REAL MEN, then DIET (slim), RICH (wealthy). |
| 8 |
Coffee taken up, in the end |
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DEMITASSE – SAT (‘taken’, as in an exam) reversed inside DEMISE. |
| 11 |
Short hose leading to barrel |
TUB – TUBE. I promised, so I won’t say it again. |
| 12 |
A small range of camping gear |
|
PRIMUS STOVE – just a CD, I think. The first pressurised paraffin stove, a design based on the hand-held blowtorch and developed in 1892 by Frans Wilhelm Lindqvist, a factory mechanic in Stockholm. I vaguely remember these things from miserable childhood trips, but since I would rather poke my eyes out with a spoon than go camping ever again, I have not had much exposure to them recently and it took me a long time to remember the term. |
| 14 |
Houses bombed out with short air raid |
AUDITORIA – an anagram of OUT and AIR RAID. This wordplay could also lead to an anagram of OUT and AIR RAID, but in this case it doesn’t. |
| 16 |
Go down and see graduate’s certificate
|
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DIPLOMA – or DIP, LO, MA. |
| 17 |
In space one thousand million years
|
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EON – hidden in ‘space one’. Did you know that an EON is a thousand million years? I didn’t. It is defined thus in Chambers, Collins and ODO: quite why the word ‘billion’ is shunned in this context I can’t tell you. The dictionaries all have AEON as the primary spelling, which doesn’t chime with my experience. Perhaps I’m unduly influenced by the name of a certain German energy company. |
| 20 |
Created illusions from circle section |
|
OP ART – or O (circle), PART. OP ART is a style of visual art that involves optical illusions. |
| 22 |
Lyrical piece about old Tokyo
|
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EDO – ODE reversed gives the old name for Japan’s capital. |
In the US, ‘crock’ is generally considered to mean completely phoney, as in “it’s all just a crock”. It is a euphemism for “crock of shit”, the archetype of something completely worthless.
Edited at 2014-07-27 07:37 am (UTC)
Thanks Keriothe for a highly entertaining blog and to all for your comments.
12D I initially had PICNIC STOVE but then remebered the old damper cooker’s real name.
horryd
Ten tens are 100
One hundred hundreds are 1000
One thousand thousands are 1,000,000
One million million is 1,000,000,000,000 or one billion.
It’s always seemed much more sensible to me to have 1,000 million as a billion. Billions come up quite a lot these days and having to say or write ‘a thousand million’ every time would be a bit annoying.