Well, this is a fine puzzle, and I suspect not as far up the SNITCH as last Wednesday’s stinker; it took me about half an hour, plus a few diversions into Wikipedia and elsewhere for enlightenment and amusement while writing the blog. Difficulty seems to vary between the quickie-level 12d and 16d, to the devilish 26a and clever 5d. Of course, if you had 21d in, the first letter of 26a gave you an easier task. But I didn’t see 21d first.
The setter has taken a bit of geographical licence with 20d, as pointed out below, but the factually correct answer doesn’t parse. And of course, I spent a few minutes refreshing my memory with quotes from 11a; I wish she was alive today to comment on The Orange One and other contemporary goings-on (she’d be 126 now).
The setter has taken a bit of geographical licence with 20d, as pointed out below, but the factually correct answer doesn’t parse. And of course, I spent a few minutes refreshing my memory with quotes from 11a; I wish she was alive today to comment on The Orange One and other contemporary goings-on (she’d be 126 now).
| Across | |
| 1 | Half of flipping idle workers getting stick (7) |
| DISTAFF – ID(LE) reversed = DI, STAFF = workers. I relied on the wordplay here. A distaff is a stick used in weaving, and separately means relating to the female side of things (the meaning I knew from weddings in church). | |
| 5 | Polish hero the limit for Caesar? (7) |
| RUBICON – RUB for polish, ICON for hero. | |
| 9 | Where set of keys may be found by relative opening grave (4,5) |
| BABY GRAND – Grave = BAD, into that put BY GRAN. Took me too long to see you needed the BY as well as the relative. | |
| 10 | Slam meat in oven (5) |
| ROAST – Double definition, slam meaning criticise. | |
| 11 | Oscar, trophy unusually bagged by more sinister wit (7,6) |
| DOROTHY PARKER – DARKER = more sinister, into that put (O TROPHY)*, the O for Oscar. I like many of her alleged quotes, although in her day many of them must have been regarded as pretty risqué. So here’s another one: “Q. What’s the difference between an enzyme and a hormone? A. You can’t hear an enzyme.” | |
| 13 | Rascally plot — assign book to top shelf? (3-2,3) |
| PUT-UP JOB – double definition, one putting JOB the book up on a top shelf. | |
| 15 | Last of water filling pinkish kettle (6) |
| CORRAL – (WATE)R inside CORAL = pinkish. Kettle as in confine, like the police do to deomonstrators. | |
| 17 | Muppet, classic character ends in film clip: Kermit say? (6) |
| NUMPTY – NU (Greek letter), M P T Y = ends in filM cliP KermiT saY. | |
| 19 | Inattentive member briefly getting in touch (8) |
| CARELESS – CARESS = touch, insert LE(G). | |
| 22 | Hearts directly affected with core of flower power (13) |
| HYDROELECTRIC – (H DIRECTLY CORE)*. | |
| 25 | Odds cut on fairy, I feel, spirit creating storm? (5) |
| ARIEL – Alternate letters of f A i R y I f E e L. As in The Tempest. | |
| 26 | Bright blue rings stolen ultimately, sucker! (9) |
| QUICKSAND – I went round the houses, determined to fit in SKY when I saw the K from 23d, before having a reboot and thinking of another meaning of blue. QUICK = bright, SAD = blue, insert N from stoleN. | |
| 27 | Official taken in by centre forward, in short (7) |
| REFEREE – I scratched my head for a while trying to explain this. I think it’s simply that REF, short for referee, occurs hidden in centRE Forward. | |
| 28 | Daisy exhausted, riding bicycle initially in wrong gear (7) |
| GERBERA – Take E R B (exhausted riding bicycle initially) insert into (GEAR)*. I knew this daisy; there must be as many types of daisy as there are daisy clues in crosswords. | |
| Down | |
| 1 | First time out, useless opener dismissed — a liability? (4) |
| DEBT – DEBUT loses the U = useless opener dismissed. | |
| 2 | Ready for the press, businessman’s banking foundation (7) |
| SUBEDIT – SUIT = businessman, insert BED = foundation. | |
| 3 | Boring thing, a pistol taking head off (5) |
| AUGER – A LUGER loses its L. | |
| 4 | Party hosts ending on floor, one over the eight perhaps? (8) |
| FRACTION – FACTION (party) has R (end of floor) inserted. | |
| 5 | Still spoiler on rear of vehicle painted with coloured substance (3-3) |
| RED-EYE – RE (on) DYE (coloured substance) has E (end of vehicle) inserted. | |
| 6 | Song in simple Venetian tune (9) |
| BARCAROLE – insert CAROL into BARE for simple. | |
| 7 | Lovely thing, solver? (7) |
| CRACKER – double definition. | |
| 8 | Turn tail as troubled student of life (10) |
| NATURALIST – (TURN TAIL AS)*. | |
| 12 | Undecided where rocket should go (2,2,3,3) |
| UP IN THE AIR – double definition, one prosaic, and dead easy. | |
| 14 | Reader mightn’t stand this heat in the kitchen, perhaps? (9) |
| POTBOILER – A pot boiler could be heat in the kitchen, and a potboiler is an often sub-standard novel churned out quickly for money. I was astounded to see recently on Richard Osman’s House of Games that Barbara Cartland wrote 723 books in her lifetime. How many were potboilers? | |
| 16 | Fielder’s skill easily picked up (8) |
| CATCHING – double definition, one like a virus. | |
| 18 | Stomach provided here? (7) |
| MIDRIFF – Apart from the definition, I think this is about IF (provided) being hidden in the word midrIFf. EDiT it’s slightly cleverer than that, as our gothic friend points out below; IF is in the ‘mid’ of RIFF. | |
| 20 | Cockney’s thus entertaining ladies, maybe, in Kaliningrad, say (7) |
| ENCLAVE – I knew Kaliningrad, once known as Köningsberg, was a part of Russia separate from the main motherland, but I was taught (and Wiki agrees) it’s an exclave not an enclave. It’s surrounded by both Poland and Lithuania, so isn’t an enclave in either. However, this pedantry aside, the answer required for the clue is ENCLAVE, where LAV (the Ladies) goes inside ‘ENCE a cockney version of hence meaning thus. | |
| 21 | On-set film panel marking celebrity (6) |
| PLAQUE – Double definition. I think the on-set film part refers to dental plaque on your set of teeth. | |
| 23 | One collecting things up, philanderer beginning to repent (5) |
| RAKER – RAKE = philanderer, R = beginning to repent. | |
| 24 | Was summing up abridged old poetry collection (4) |
| EDDA – ADDED = was summing, up, drop the final D (abridged). | |
Today is the 60th birthday of the greatest English Ad Agency – Collett, Dickenson & Pearce. Cheers guys! What fun we had, reaching the parts others only dreamed of: cue music: Bach’s Air on a G string.
Yes, a struggle but a very pleasant one, as was 27627.
FOI 5ac RUBICON no not Y&R (that’s Young & Rubicam.)
LOI 5dn RED-EYE from Saatchi & Saatchi
COD 9ac BABY GRAND (Loussier?)
WOD 7dn CRACKER Robbie Coltrane (The Tartan Pimpernel!)
Pip it’s Barbara Cartland – ‘Her Pinkness’ would be mortified!
Edited at 2020-04-01 07:15 am (UTC)
My mother was a Dorothy
I was also held up by needing to get 26a QUICKSAND before its Q got me the 21d PLAQUE, both smart clues, but it was 1a DISTAFF, where I didn’t know that it was also literally a stick as well as an adjective, and 4d FRACTION that were my last in.
COD 21d PLAQUE, on reflection, as I spent far too long trying to fit in GEL or CELL or something similar for the on-set film bit…
Very pleased to have entered BARCAROLE from the definition ‘Venetian tune’ with no checkers to jog my memory.
Some tricky words in there such as BARCAROLE, the gondoliers’ song, and EDDA, the Norse tales. I think kettle to mean CORRAL is a pretty new coinage.
FOI UP IN THE AIR, multi-word answers often a way in.
COD and LOI PLAQUE, quite a groan for ‘on-set film’.
Yesterday’s answer: Lough Neagh is the largest UK lake by surface area and Loch Ness the largest by volume, containing more fresh water than the whole of England and Wales, not bad. Inspired by MERE.
Today’s question: the city of Königsberg (now Kaliningrad) is famous to mathematicians for its seven bridges that can’t be crossed once each (I went there a couple of years ago but not all of them remain unfortunately), but what famous person allegedly never left Königsberg in his life?
“A common myth is that Kant never traveled more than 16 kilometres (9.9 mi) from Königsberg his whole life. In fact, between 1750 and 1754 he worked as a tutor (Hauslehrer) in Judtschen (now Veselovka, Russia, approximately 20 km) and in Groß-Arnsdorf (now Jarnołtowo near Morąg (German: Mohrungen), Poland, approximately 145 km).”
Is that close enough to have “never left”?
Instead my eyes were stabbed by the flash of a neon light pink with a confidently (but stupidly entered) RED-DYE, even though I knew everything about the clue.
Good challenge, that lower half requiring much brain strain, for which assistance many thanks to Pip.
COD to RED-EYE, although enumeration made it easier. NHO GERBERA, had to be built up from wordplay.
Really liked RUBICON too, would have been harder by using triumvir or such rather than Caesar.
17′ 18″, thanks Pip and setter.
30 mins to leave the last two, then gave up on the On-set film and Sucker. Pah!
Thanks setter and Pip.
I have taken 10, 20 and now 30 minutes this week so I would be concerned about tomorrow (if I had paid attention in my Maths lessons).
I didn’t love the clue for REFEREE, but otherwise spotless.
Referee was my last one in , mainly because it seemed too literal. Plaque was COTD but others I liked were numpty, quicksand and fraction.
Finished in 35 minutes but didn’t feel disappointed.
First I must thank Pip for clearing up my biffs (DEBT and SUBEDIT) which slowed me down in the NW corner until DISTAFF revealed the probabilities, and opened up my LOI. I parsed MIDRIFF afterwards – not quite COD, but close, as was NUMPTY.
FOI RUBICON
LOI FRACTION
COD PLAQUE
TIME 12:23
There seems to be some disagreement about what exactly an ENCLAVE is and how it differs from an EXCLAVE but none of the usual dictionaries (Collins, Lexico, Chambers) require the distinction described by wikipedia. The Collins position is intriguing: it defines ENCLAVE and EXCLAVE as being the same thing viewed from different perspectives.
16dn struck me as a bit insensitive just now!
Edited at 2020-04-01 11:07 am (UTC)
Even in wide-aisled Shanghai ‘supermarket etiquette’ can be horrible and the ‘toblerones’ mean nothing. Personal space is even worse – maybe that will improve henceforth.
I’ve been off my trolley recently.
Couldn’t see past RED-DYE and CLIQUE, both of which had question marks in the margin. Much thanks to Pirrip for the explanations! (Also for the explanation of MIDRIFF!)
Oh well
From eg Collins:
ENCLAVE: a part of a country entirely surrounded by foreign territory:
viewed from the perspective of the surrounding territories.
EXCLAVE: a part of a country entirely surrounded by foreign territory:
viewed from the perspective of the home country.
So it’s entirely a question of perspective, and given we aren’t in Russia (easy to forgwt perhaps on this website) then arguable ENCLAVE is more correct.
Yes, many clues were simple, but the blogger had to struggle to justify many of the other solutions. As disappointing as the crossword were the remarks of the masochistic sycophants.