I found this on the trickier side of things, being pushed over the 15 minute mark thanks to some faffing about in the NE. I mis-parsed 7d, and spent some time trying to square the answer with only half the definition. I also came a cropper at 9ac having entered a plausible enough alternative answer (well, plausible except for that pesky little detail about it having to intersect with other clues). Further time was spent at 10ac trying to remember that word for “delicate” that was on the tip of my tongue (“diaphanous” – right length, as it happens). I don’t think I was particularly quick round the rest of it either , but there were some nice clues – I remember particularly liking 4ac,16d and the two double definitions at 8ac and 24ac. Very good puzzle – many thanks to Mara!
| Across | |
| 1 | Some discontent on gallant island nation (5) |
| TONGA – Hidden in “some” of the letters of discontenT ON GAllant | |
| 4 | Surrender vilified after retreat (7) |
| DELIVER – REVILED = vilified, reversed = after retreat. Surrender/deliver/hand over/etc. | |
| 8 | Heavy trampolinist? (7) |
| BOUNCER – double definition, a heavy = a guard, etc. Nice! | |
| 9 | Average is capital! (5) |
| PARIS – PAR (average) IS. I had MEANS (mean’s = average’s) entered, and forgot on returning to the NE that I wasn’t quite 100% happy with it. | |
| 10 | Expensive clasps are, almost entirely, delicate (10) |
| PRECARIOUS – PRECIOUS (expensive) clasps/holds AR (“AR |
|
| 14 | An American girl far from home? (6) |
| ABROAD – A broad = an American girl | |
| 15 | Nebuchadnezzar, for example, daring (6) |
| BOTTLE – double definition. I thought a Nebuchadnezzar was the largest bottle size, coming in at 20 normal bottles of champagne/claret, but I see the largest is 40 bottles and called either Melchizedek or Midas. Good luck giving that thing a shake. Normally a stupid custom, but I’d have it as the opening round of a decadent strong man competition: a minute to shake it, points for highest fountain, and whatever’s left in the bottle must be consumed before continuing. | |
| 17 | US president plying heroes with wine (10) |
| EISENHOWER – anagram (plying) of HEROES with WINE | |
| 20 | Artist mid-morning, maybe, returning (5) |
| MANET – TEN AM is plausibly mid-morning, reverse/return | |
| 22 | Hearing of our nation, this English composer (7) |
| BRITTEN – is heard the same as BRITAIN (our nation) | |
| 23 | Give account of art near complex (7) |
| NARRATE – anagram (complex) of ART NEAR | |
| 24 | Arctic fleet (5) |
| NIPPY – double definition. Fleet/quick/nippy. In my book, the lovely surface more than makes up for any temperature differential there might be between “arctic” and “nippy”. | |
| Down | |
| 1 | Instrument neighbour put up (4) |
| TUBA – to ABUT = to neighbour, put up/reversed | |
| 2 | Absence of American intelligence (4) |
| NOUS – NO (absence of) US (American) | |
| 3 | Discover fluff in car seat (9) |
| ASCERTAIN – anagram (fluff) of IN CAR SEAT | |
| 4 | Frank having credit renewed (6) |
| DIRECT – anagram (renewed) of CREDIT | |
| 5 | Drink: a complete round (3) |
| LAP – double definition | |
| 6 | So bottomless, opening for drink (8) |
| VERMOUTH – VERY = So, bottomless = remove the bottom letter ; MOUTH (opening) | |
| 7 | Incredible dessert I held back (8) |
| RESISTED – anagram (incredible) of DESSERT I. I was just blindly convinced that the parsing was an anagram of “dessert” within which the “I” was held, giving “back” for “resisted”. I know, doesn’t make any sense. | |
| 11 | Old African horse and I, struggling (9) |
| RHODESIAN – anagram (struggling) of HORSE AND I | |
| 12 | Out of order, nameless traders (8) |
| SALESMEN – anagram (out of order) of NAMELESS | |
| 13 | Voting system about right, is one captive? (8) |
| PRISONER – PR (Proportional Representation = voting system) going about/around R(ight) IS ONE. | |
| 16 | Fix strange blue drink (6) |
| DOUBLE – DO (fix) ; anagram (strange) of BLUE. Do = fix as in “the person came to do the boiler. Also works as a noun: in a do / a fix / a tight spot. | |
| 18 | Cease work below street (4) |
| STOP – OP (work) below ST(reet) | |
| 19 | Sole aplenty, reel in two, all tails up (4) |
| ONLY – all tails up = all last letters, reversed of aplentY, reeL iN twO | |
| 21 | Food and drink (3) |
| TEA – double definition. | |
MY LOI was ABROAD where I was convinced GAL was in there somehow. 16:02 in the end.
Congratulations to Mara for giving us all a good test. David
Friday tomorrow, and probably an Izetti . . . .
Brian
Edited at 2019-04-25 08:23 am (UTC)
An enjoyable challenge completed in 20.27 with LOI PRECARIOUS.
Thanks for the blog
NeilC
Edited at 2019-04-25 08:45 am (UTC)
Templar
Edited at 2019-04-26 12:56 am (UTC)
opened up the lower half for me, but the NE really had me struggling. Some tough stuff here. Thanks Mara and Roly.
My thanks to setter and blogger.
6’00”
FOI TONGA
LOI RESISTED
COD VERMOUTH
TIME 7:54
FOI – Tonga
LOI – Precarious
COD – Manet
I got on with the big one quite a bit better, only to fall at the very last hurdle (two letters just would not fall into place) so maybe others might like it too. Give it a whirl, anyway – it’s (nearly) always fun even if you don’t finish 🙂
Cod double.
Edited at 2019-04-25 04:56 pm (UTC)
Thanks to Mara for a good challenge and to Rolytoly for the blog. MM
FOI TONGA
LOI LAP
COD MANET
Several hours.
Had to leave the NE corner for a few days – then managed to get VERMOUTH and the rest followed…
Tricky but very enjoyable!
Nick