It took me far too long to untangle all this, I needed Wiki afterwards to check a couple, and it had a feeling that I was wrestling with a TLS puzzle by mistake at times. Shakespeare, Greek Classics, Greek geography, linguistics, musicology, and – if I’m correct at 5d – a memory of Dylan lyrics, all were called upon if you were to get through this fully parsed and ship shape. Fortunately, there were some easy clues like 11a, 2d, and the anagram at 21a to give us some early checkers, else I’d probably still be chewing the pencil. I look forward to your wise comments.
| Across | |
| 1 | Stop working because of line in operating system (4,5) |
| DOWN TOOLS – DOWN TO = because of, then L inside OS. | |
| 6 | One shoe, not quite the pair, going with it (5) |
| SABOT – SA (it, sex appeal) BOT(H) = not quite the pair. | |
| 9 | Run away from anger and depression in Greece (5) |
| TEMPE – TEMPER (anger) loses its R. The wordplay is simple but you’d have to be a fan of Greek geography to know the reference. I lived for nearly 4 years in Greece (the Peloponnese, not the northern region where the Valley of Tempe is to be found), and I’d not heard of it. Maybe it’s famous in the Classical canon. OHO! I see, on reading Wiki, it is. | |
| 10 | Ladies, staying on, visit New Zealand tourist attraction (6,3) |
| LONDON ZOO – LOO (ladies) has ON, then DO NZ (visit New Zealand) inserted. Seems not quite right to me, the ‘staying’ piece, to indicate it’s all inserted, but that’s the answer. | |
| 11 | Easy reward from getting on line? (5,3,3,4) |
| MONEY FOR OLD ROPE – Cryptic definition. | |
| 13 | Laments day-old fails (8) |
| MONODIES – MON(day), O(ld), DIES = fails. A monody is an ode of lament by one person e.g. in a Greek tragedy. | |
| 14 | One outlet accepts new coin (6) |
| INVENT – I (one) VENT (outlet) accepts N(ew). Coin, as in coin a new word or expression. | |
| 16 | Stupid that hotel do only flipping sandwiches! (6) |
| NOODLE – Hidden word reversed in HOT(EL DO ON)LY. Well, stupid is an adjective, and noodle is a noun (at least I can’t find it listed as an adjective) but doubtless someone else will. Or is stupid a noun here? | |
| 18 | Press chief with another cider, too inebriated! (8) |
| COEDITOR – (CIDER TOO)*. | |
| 21 | New MP, one come to help folk in general (3,6,6) |
| THE COMMON PEOPLE – (MP ONE COME TO HELP)*. | |
| 23 | Fights to finish or to drive out soliciting? (9) |
| SHOOTOUTS – If you said “Shoo, touts!” you could be driving out soliciting people. | |
| 25 | Sound unstressed after chief visiting was abused (5) |
| SCHWA – Insert CH for chief into (WAS)*. SCHWA, symbol (), is the indistinct vowel sound of an unstressed syllable, e.g. the ‘e’ in ‘the’ in rapid speech. As opposed the e in ‘the’ pronounced ‘thee’. Hope you followed that. Did you have S-H-A and wing it from wordplay? | |
| 26 | Refuse when beginning to recycle to break bed down (5) |
| DROSS – First letter of Recycle goes into DOSS = bed down. | |
| 27 | Moderating playtime instruction often led by ma (3,6) |
| NON TROPPO – a clue for musicians; e.g. ALLEGRO MA NON TROPPO is a common marking meaning ‘fast but not too fast’ in Italian. | |
| Down | |
| 1 | Lady briefly taking you for a Parisian in fact (5) |
| DATUM – DAM(E) = lady briefly, insert TU being French for you singular; a piece of information, Latin for ‘a thing given’. | |
| 2 | Book token given by wife — and with it, nothing (5,2,4) |
| WOMEN IN LOVE – W (wife) OMEN = token, sign; IN (with it, trendy), LOVE (nothing, zero). Seems a complicated way to clue this example of a novel. | |
| 3 | Drawing you had coloured a certain way (3-4) |
| TIE-DYED – TIED (drawing, all square), YE’D (you had), punctuation revised to suit. | |
| 4 | Witness, removed from case, won’t peach (8) |
| ONLOOKER – WON’T has its ‘case’ removed, giving ON, LOOKER = peach, good looking lady. | |
| 5 | Narrator’s understood the reader’s older (6) |
| SENIOR – I think this is a homophone clue, we’re due for one. SENIOR sounding like SENOR addressed by the narrator as in the song lyric by Bob Dylan? Seems a long shot but I can’t see another reference that fits the surface. No doubt it’s not that obscure? | |
| 6 | Fellow with TV spots royal photographer (7) |
| SNOWDON – DON a fellow goes on the end of SNOW = white noise, TV spots. AKA Antony Charles Robert Armstrong-Jones, snapper who married Princess Margaret. | |
| 7 | Bachelor place Dorothy visits to see sketch writer (3) |
| BOZ – B plus OZ. Sketches by Boz were by Dickens. | |
| 8 | Once on the outside, we start to work in tandem? (3-6) |
| TWO-SEATER – (O E WE START)*, where O E is ‘once on the outside’. | |
| 12 | A person ends short trip in general store (3-4,4) |
| ONE-STOP SHOP – ONE (a person) STOPS (ends) HOP (short trip). | |
| 13 | Painter papers around bottom right corner made ready (9) |
| MONETISED – MONET (painter) ID (papers) around SE (south-east, bottom right corner). | |
| 15 | Leaving possible heir a dodgy business? (6-2) |
| GOINGS-ON – GOING (leaving) SON (possible heir). | |
| 17 | Paranoid old ruler putting Trotsky on trial briefly (7) |
| LEONTES – LEON Trotsky + TES(T). As TLS solvers will know, King Leontes was the paranoid character in A Winter’s Tale. I didn’t know it though, I’ve never seen or read it. | |
| 19 | Furniture you’ll find in different sorts of theatre (7) |
| DRESSER – Double definition, you have dressers in theatres. I’m not a luvvy so I don’t understand why ‘different sorts of’. That sounds like an anagrind, but it isn’t. | |
| 20 | Challenge on reflection no good: how to go from London to Leeds? (6) |
| IMPUGN – All reversed; NG, UP M1. | |
| 22 | Retroaction not oddly one to inspire (5) |
| ERATO – Even letters of rEtRoAcTiOn, Erato was the Muse of love poetry so can inspire you. | |
| 24 | That’s a surprise, the Hoops eclipsing Hearts (3) |
| OHO – O O (hoops) around H(earts). | |
27:20
Edited at 2020-08-12 05:50 am (UTC)
I groaned (naturally)at “seen your” for SENIOR but also smiled as I prefer dodgy homophones to be outrageous like this one, rather than simply dodgy.
On Kevin’s point about DRESSER I took the clue to be a variation on a triple definition. The stage and surgical meanings are effectively the same anyway as in the early days of surgery operating theatres were generally open to those interested, and people would pay money to see star surgeons of the day demonstrate their skills.
Edited at 2020-08-12 06:48 am (UTC)
I really enjoyed this – though, as others report, several biffs were needed to get over the line. Thanks to the setter for a fun puzzle and to Pip for unravelling the biffs.
We had a house in Marrickville in Sydney for 10 years. Tempe was a neighbouring suburb. There is an IKEA there which, I believe is the largest in the southern hemisphere.
In 24d I started with OOH instead of OHO so that messed things up for a while.
I have heard of threnodies but never of MONODIES.
No real COD for me.
Liked it!
Thanks pip.
I managed to make SENIOR even more of a wonderfully dire homophone, concluding in desperation with SEEN EYER, the latter a smudge for reader and for the second half.
Does anyone other than a Times crossworder refer to the bottom right as the SE? Setter, art thou revealed, at least a bit?
A decent, rather eccentric, workout. 23 minutes
Edited at 2020-08-12 07:41 am (UTC)
COD: SNOWDON – I loved TV spots
Yesterday’s answer: feta is unusual in being a protected designation of origin product because there is no place called ‘Feta’, whereas almost all others have a place name to identify them.
Today’s question: which other zoo apart from the one in Regent’s Park is owned by the Zoological Society of London?
Thanks Pip for SABOT. If not for you I just wouldn’t have a clue how that one worked.
Thanks!
I liked monetised, if not the whole of its clueing, SE for bottom-right.
There was some clever stuff though and in the end the most annoying thing was my own silly mistake: I saw exactly how the wordplay for 6dn worked but still managed to type SNOWDEN. Unfortunately this could well be how his name was spelled for all I knew so I didn’t pick up the error when checking my answers at the end.
Drat.
But then you know all that.
Andyf
FOI COEDITOR
LOI ONLOOKER
COD IMPUGN
TIME 14:38
Edited at 2020-08-12 04:36 pm (UTC)
MONETISED is my COD, a nice cryptic definition… which always goes nicely alongside some wordplay, doesn’t it?
COD: Monetised. Made ready made me smile Mesdames.
I raced through most of this pretty quickly, but I had unfortunately biffed drop tools instead of down tools, which took a long time to straighten out. Time: 42 minutes.
I hadn’t regarded 13A as just a cryptic definition and thought it was
“Reward from” (MONEY FOR) “getting on” (OLD) “line” (ROPE).
Agree about the triple definition at 19D. Isn’t a dresser in the entertainment industry someone who helps an actor with costume changes in the wings and, as such, distinct from an operating theatre dresser, who is more concerned with draping, bandaging and assisting with surgery?
I agree with keriothe – time to stop the IT / SA nonsense. In fact, I’m not overly keen on looker / peach either – smacks of the Stranglers hit from the 70s, which despite the great riff, was horribly sexist even then. I liked TANDEM and IMPUGN – the M1 bit was obvious (especially to someone who lives a mile from that noisy if convenient motorway) but it took a while to get the ‘up’ bit. I wouldn’t recommend taking a tandem up the M1 though 😉
FOI Coeditor – looks so wrong
LOI Onlookers
COD Shootouts
Time about 50 mins
Thanks setter and Pip for the wise and witty blog
I smiled at IMPUGN and enjoyed unravelling COEDITOR (although I would hyphenate it) and ONE STOP SHOP.
My COD is MONEY FOR OLD ROPE, if only for providing lots of checkers for several down clues!
Finished in just under 38 minutes so not a bad day.
Thanks to the setter and to Pip for his helpful blog.
Some real pearls in the cluing- monetised, monodies and schwa being the stand outs for me. Had to work hard to achieve results but rewarding.
I assumed it was seen ya ( or seen you ), with you being the reader. Nice blog, pip
Can I be boring and reiterate topicaltim’s comment?