Maybe everyone else will find it a breeze, but I would say that this is definitely not one for the Quickie brigade.
ACROSS
1 Good girl we’re told deciding it’s an unfair obstacle (5,7)
GLASS CEILING – G LASS sounds like ‘sealing’
9 Greek festival inspires king – it’s something in the atmosphere (5)
ARGON – R in AGON; a Greek festival, such as the one at Olympia, at which competitors vied for laurel wreaths et al
10 Musical style it’s rude to sing (9)
BLUEGRASS – BLUE GRASS (rat on someone)
11 The cloth sample on skimpy garments (8)
MINISTRY – TRY on MINIS
12 Leave the neighbouring housing compound (6)
ETHENE – hidden in[leav[E THE NE[eighbouring]; I’d herard of ETHANE but not this stuff
13 Investigator on the booze (8)
REPORTER – RE PORTER (a dark sweet ale brewed from black malt – one of my favourite tipples)
15 Heavy drinks bottles heading for tavern (6)
ROTUND – T[avern] in ROUND (‘drinks bottles heading for tavern’ is crosswordese for chuck the initial letter of tavern in drinks)
17 Reduce by cooking in two months (6)
DECOCT – DEC OCT; if I was being really honest (something I haven’t tried for some time now) I would have to say that I’d never heard of this word. I probably said that last time it came up…
18 Flatter, or fairly flat? (8)
BLANDISH – if something were not that dull, but definitely on the dull side (think Michael MacIntyre doing yet another observational domestic sketch), then you might call it on the bland side, or indeed, ‘blandish’. Oh God, I think I’ve just given him an idea he’ll be able to pad out into a 3-minute item…
20 Prickly Scandinavian hero content to leave Norway (6)
THORNY – THOR N[orwa]Y
21 Sordid party game (8)
BASEBALL – BASE BALL
24 View short camera shot, in which a lot is crooked? (5,4)
CRIME WAVE – anagram* of VIEW CAMER[a]
25 Fiddle one misplaced? There it is! (5)
VOILA – VOILA with the I moving about
26 Christian book favouring giving up almost everything (12)
PROCESSIONAL – PRO CESSION (giving up) AL[l]; a book as well as ‘Once in Royal David’s City’ then
DOWN
1 What may qualify school to provide set of rules (7)
GRAMMAR – one of the words that may premodify school, along with finishing and special needs, is GRAMMAR
2 Front of chest in great pain, so could be this? (6,8)
ANGINA PECTORIS – C[hest] IN GREAT PAIN SO* for the heart-related chest pain that my healthy lifestyle has so far kept me safe from
3 Passage south across the Atlantic (5)
SINUS – S IN US
4 Got on vessel in eastern sea (8)
EMBARKED – BARK in E MED
5 Flamboyant old Law Lord entertains (4)
LOUD – O in LUD; it is a sad indictment of modern times that judges are no longer addressed by barristers with their hands pressed against their chests under the lapels of their gowns as M’Lud. Boring old Milord is now the order of the day in the lego-judicial industry.
6 New wig and thong, kinky bedroom gear (9)
NIGHTGOWN – n[ew] WIG THONG*; shame on anyone who went down the leather, wrist-cuff route…
7 Invalid with a nature that’s sickly? (14)
VALETUDINARIAN – INVALID A NATURE* for the hypochondriac
8 Get promoted in a post broadcasting (6)
ASCEND – A sounds like ‘send’
14 Trained to run race, his performance is telling (9)
RACONTEUR – TO RUN RACE*
16 They could hack off Conservative Brexiteers (8)
CLEAVERS – C LEAVERS (bless ’em – I’d never have joined in the first place)
17 Didn’t like touring Croatia’s capital, back in Split (6)
DETACH – HATED reversed around C[roatia]
19 Item for traveller knocking on mansion walls (7)
HOLDALL – OLD (knocking on – geddit?) in HALL; walls is the containment indicator
22 Brief verse in French mostly useless (5)
ENVOI – EN VOI[d]; a literary entity that is still commonly found in crosswords – along with EPODES, ELEGIES et al – meaning a short stanza concluding a ballade
23 Demonstrate putting away hot alcoholic drink (4)
MARC – MARC[h]
I did find this one a little tough for a monday, but not unduly so – my 31 minutes is not far over my average. NTLOI was VALETUDINARIAN (a word whose meaning I did not know; nor did I spot the anagram), closely followed by the nicely concealed ETHENE. NHO ‘agon’, but there weren’t any other options. Most people believe the main constituents of air to be nitrogen, oxygen and CO2, but argon is actually about 20 times as abundant as CO2 – it just doesn’t get the press it deserves because of its shy, retiring nature.
A hard puzzle that wasn’t that hard for me, perhaps?
Edited at 2018-10-15 03:27 am (UTC)
Edited at 2018-10-15 07:51 am (UTC)
I had originally intended to use aids for one answer and then return to the fray, but having found VALETUDINARIAN (a word I don’t think I knew) none of the missing words intersecting with it leapt out at me, so I threw in the towel and looked them up too.
My only slight quibble is the definition ‘heavy’ for ROTUND as I’d say the answer actually refers to shape rather than weight. I had ‘robust’ in mind which seemed a better fit if it were not for wordplay.
Edited at 2018-10-15 05:29 am (UTC)
A hard struggle, with the entire SE the hardest. DNK “agon”, VALETUDINARIAN, PROCESSIONAL or “bark” (I might’ve guessed it was an alternate of “barque” if I hadn’t thought “ark” was the vessel!)
I thought this was ok. I got the long downward anagrams quickly.
Ethene LOI – well hidden.
Mostly I liked: Invalid with a nature, Detach and COD to Blandish.
Thanks setter and U.
VALETUDINARY came up in October last year.
I have since started a list of words to revise, though (as always with my studies) my list is growing but my time spent actually revising is not.
Thanks ulaca and setter.
I liked the risque but ultimately disappointingly flannelette NIGHTGOWN, and the rude music, and was relieved that the setter decided against continuing the naughty theme with a wince-inducing soundalike clue for DECOCT.
We had (of course) both a processional and recessional hymn at yesterdays oecumenical World Peace Service, but I don’t think I’ve ever seen a book of either.
Many thanks to Ulaca for a blog combining proper solving with exemplary pithy and apposite commentary: I especially appreciated “a literary entity that is still commonly found in crosswords” for ENVOI. Fine writing.
Mr Woodhouse is described as a VALETUDINARIAN in the first chapter of Emma and for some reason the word has always stuck with me since reading the novel as a teenager. I wish I knew how to make my memory do that more regularly, and with more useful information.
Edited at 2018-10-15 07:50 am (UTC)
Heavy (semantic field of weight) didn’t work for me as a def for ROTUND (semantic field of shape).
For CO, I liked the &lit VALETUDINARIAN or the neat BLANDISH.
My thanks to blogger and setter.
FOI ARGON
DNK ANGINA PECTORIS, ETHENE, or PROCESSIONAL, despite a GRAMMAR school education.
I enjoyed Ulaca’s blog almost as much as the puzzle, and thanks for parsing ENVOI.
LOI CRIME WAVE, which was almost COD, but that accolade goes to GLASS CEILING.
Edited at 2018-10-15 02:45 pm (UTC)
Otherwise, a nice crossword with some fun cryptic approaches. 9m 33s with that error.
Cod for me GLASS CEILING.
Emergency stents in order.
Thanks to setter and blogger
noun
1. anatomy
a. any bodily cavity or hollow space
b. a large channel for venous blood, esp between the brain and the skull
c. any of the air cavities in the cranial bones
2. pathology
a passage leading to a cavity containing pus
Back to episode 7 of Killing Eve.
Edited at 2018-10-16 10:00 pm (UTC)