After work the art department wanted to go to the pub, you see, and one pint turned to two, and then the head of department got bought a large wine but she’d only wanted a small wine because she was driving so half of it was going spare, and you can’t waste a nice Picpoul apparently; and then I headed back to South Norwood where there was a free showing of Mulholland Drive to be had, except when I got there someone had forgotten the DVD and they were showing Labyrinth instead, and I thought okay, that’s a very different vibe but I can get through it with the help of a large bottle of beer from the bar. Except then the projector packed in and stopped serving up any magenta, so we were watching a murky German Expressionist version of the movie, Das Kabinett des David Bowie, and the organiser was so contrite he gave me another one of whatever I was having on the house… by the time I got home I was lucky I could spell “crossword”, much less do one. If you need to warn any children off the perils of the demon drink, just show them this blog post and they’ll go straight for life.
Nice puzzle though I thought, not much in the way of unusual vocabulary or classical allusion but some inventive cluing, and all done with an obvious sense of humour. I particularly enjoyed the “three eighths” at 13A, whose penny dropped a fair length of time after the answer had gone in, and also the pantsless Amundsen at 16D. Isn’t it a bit cold at the South Pole for that kind of thing?
Can’t remember my FOI, possibly 3A after I’d dutifully fallen for and then quickly rejected RED HERRING, or else 5D? My LOI was definitely 21A though. Double definitions and puns are the hardest for me when I’m one over the eight, I find. Anyway, got to get some girls out of the door and to school – thanks so much to the setter and with any luck I’ll have sobered up in time for the next one!
| Across | |
| 1 | PUFF – double def: advertisement / a drag (i.e. on a cigarette) |
| 3 | RED SNAPPER – a fish: REDS NAPPER [Liverpool | kipper] |
| 10 | PROBOSCIS – trunk: PRO BOSS [for | big cheese] “packed with” C I [C{heddar} (and) I{lchester} “for starters”] |
| 11 | OUNCE – feline: {p}OUNCE [to strike “after heading off”] |
| 12 | RATHOLE – squalid room: (HER A LOT*) [“upset”] |
| 13 | LETHAL – “enough to finish you off”: LET [allowed] + HAL{f} [“three eighths?” i.e. 3/4 of “half”] |
| 15 | HONEYSUCKLE ROSE – old song: (CHORUS SO KEENLY*) [“jazzed up”] + E [{Basi}E’s “ultimate”] |
| 18 | SHRINK-RESISTANT – unlikely to diminish: a person “averse to analysis” would be resistant to their shrink |
| 21 | PERIOD – double def: in the US, (full) stop / a while |
| 23 | OUTSIDE – slim (as in an outside chance): (TEDIOUS*) [“exercises”] |
| 26 | RHINO – double def: money / “one might charge” |
| 27 | BARTENDER – cocktail maker: ART [skill] “amid” BENDER [drinking binge] |
| 28 | DINNER-TIME – when to feed: DIME [money] “safeguarding” INNER T [private | T{uition} “at first”] |
| 29 | EXAM – test: M AXE [marks | cut] “back” |
| Down | |
| 1 | PAPER CHASE – hunting game: (APES*) [“wild”] “trapping” A PERCH [a fish] |
| 2 | FLOAT – triple def: bob / cash / put forward |
| 4 | EXCHEQUER – funds: ER [Queen] “investing” X CHEQUE [unknown amount (with) alternative to cash] |
| 5 | SISAL – coarse stuff: “among” {video}S IS AL{arming} |
| 6 | APOSTLE – preacher: A + ST [pious type] entering POLE [bar] |
| 7 | PENSACOLA – a port in Florida: PENS A COLA [more than one pound | a | drink] |
| 8 | REEL – spin: sounds like REAL [not made up, “as some might say”] |
| 9 | COLONY – community: COLON [“a couple of points”,i.e. “:”] + Y [“ending in” {controvers}Y] |
| 14 | KETTLEDRUM – musical instrument: kettles have whistles |
| 16 | NORWEGIAN – “Amundsen was”: (WEARING NO*) [“pants”] |
| 17 | KISSOGRAM – message passionately delivered: SS + ARGO [one ship (and) another “capsizing”] in KIM [novel] |
| 19 | NOISOME – offensive: NOISE [racket] “stealing” OM [“contents of” {t}OM{b}”] |
| 20 | SETTER – double def: crossword compiler / the Sun |
| 22 | DEBUT – first appearance: D E [“ends in” D{isgrac}E] + BUT [however] |
| 24 | INDEX – guide: {k}IND [type “missing heading”] on EX [old] |
| 25 | TRAD – classic: DART [flower (i.e. river) “uprooted”] |
Considered the ‘front’ trap but was sober enough to have a rethink.
CoD 15a for the obscure anagram and good surface.
Another hasty RED HERRING here, quickly corrected when I saw the clue for SISAL.
I was relieved to find PENSACOLA wasn’t a momble.
All but two solved in 31 minutes, then 19 minutes on the remainder before giving up and reaching for the dictionary.
Edited at 2015-03-06 09:57 am (UTC)
How long before Sideshow Bob gets a look in to clue BARTENDER? Will we have to wait until it’s as old a reference as HONEYSUCKLE ROSE? We’ve had Harry Potter clues (and several themed Listeners). When does popular culture (I like it) become sufficiently high art to warrant inclusion?
Edited at 2015-03-06 10:23 am (UTC)
COD to shrink-resistant, thanks to V for the blog and Z for the Bart-ender clue.
On the other hand, I don’t instantly associate Liverpool with ‘Reds’ – maybe they should have used Cincinnati instead?
But even I know that a florin was two shillings….
Definitely heard of PENSACOLA but didn’t know how to spell it, so glad the wordplay was clear enough.
Good fun all round, I thought.
But I didn’t parse KISSAGRAM.
Great blog Verlaine, well played setter. COD to the Norwegian.
i have googled and looked at online thesauruses but cannot find any connection
would somebody explain it to me
DaveG
We used to call him a loafer…
It’s pretty common UK slang, as is shown by these late-70s lyrics by Madness.
DaveG
If “kettles have whistles” really is the explanation of 14dn (KETTLEDRUM), then it seems a very weak clue! (Or am I missing something?) I wasn’t all that keen on TRAD = “classic” in 25dn either.
I think I saw TRAD as a definition for classic somewhere else this week, which helped a lot. Possibly somewhere in the Graun.
I enjoyed 13ac (with its “three eighths”), and 16d is my COD (although, this being Sunday, it’s technically my CODBY).
Tomorrow (Sunday; although as noted that is technically today) is the 100th anniversary of the birth of Tapio Rautavaara, the famous and only Finnish javelin-throwing actor. I intend to celebrate in the Finnish tradition, by drinking heavily.