Another tricky enough QC today – I did the last three QCs in a row and took pretty much bang on 15, 9 and 12 minutes for Tue/Wed/today. So halfway between tricky and average by my reckoning, but certainly of the usual high quality that we’ve come to expect from Izetti – many thanks!
| Across | |
| 1 | See poet in my Italian region (8) |
| LOMBARDY – LO (see) BARD (poet) in MY. My first thought was “Piedmont”, which does have 7/8ths of the letters of “poet in my” – if only my Italian geography was better, the neighbouring region of Lombardy might have popped into my head, which would have been a much slicker route to the solution than waiting for the L in 1d. Ah well. | |
| 5 | Try to get very warm after beginning to shiver (4) |
| SHOT – HOT (very warm) after S (beginning to Shiver) | |
| 8 | Achieves victory, having imbibed last of the drinks (5) |
| WINES – WINS (achieves victory) imbibing E (last of thE) | |
| 9 | Sent back uncooked food, creating conflict (7) |
| WARFARE – WAR (RAW = uncooked, sent back) FARE (food). | |
| 11 | Heftier girl newly engaged, one set aflame? (11) |
| FIRELIGHTER – anagram (newly engaged) of HEFTIER GIRL. So much for assuming it had to end in “light”, and entering that part confidently into the grid. | |
| 13 | When to drink litres, going to brilliant wine-growing region (6) |
| ALSACE – AS (when) to drink L(itres) going to ACE (brilliant) | |
| 14 | Seaside town submerged in festive season (2,4) |
| ST IVES – “Submerged” in the letters of feSTIVE Season. (Not the St Ives with the comedy police station mentioned yesterday.) | |
| 16 | Drivers in a breach of public order with applause all round (11) |
| CHARIOTEERS – A RIOT (a breach of public order) with CHEERS (applause) all around it | |
| 18 | One goes round back of shop, getting grabbed by wicked person (7) |
| SPINNER – P (“back” of shoP) grabbed by SINNER (wicked person) | |
| 19 | Enthusiastic about grabbing composer’s final piece of music (5) |
| INTRO – INTO (enthusiastic about) grabbing R (“final” of composeR) | |
| 20 | Carol is smart, wasting little time (4) |
| SING – STING (smart) wasting T (little/abbreviated TIME). As in “to carol”. | |
| 21 | Sort of ruler in gaol, rich, corrupt (8) |
| OLIGARCH – anagram (corrupt) of GAOL RICH | |
| Down | |
| 1 | Rules in Wales somehow putting English off (4) |
| LAWS – anagram (somehow) of WALES minus the E (putting English off) | |
| 2 | Disclosure of fellow with uncertainty, beginning to embarrass Victoria maybe (13) |
| MANIFESTATION – MAN (fellow) with IF (an IF = an uncertainty) E (“beginning” to Embarrass) STATION (Victoria, maybe). Perhaps not the first synonym that springs to mind, but: to manifest / to show clearly / to disclose / to reveal. | |
| 3 | Having muscles pulling creates a state of preoccupation (11) |
| ABSTRACTION – ABS (muscles) TRACTION (pulling). Read the clue as: Having A + B creates C. The OED has a quote from 1848 by Leigh Hunt, “Sir Isaac Newton carried abstraction far enough, when he used a lady’s finger for a tobacco-stopper.” After more consideration than I’d care to admit giving a manifestly apocryphal anecdote, I really couldn’t decide whether Newton was meant to have had a stick of okra to hand, or the hand of an equally abstracted lady (okra was more likely but hardly remarkable)… after looking elsewhere I see it was the female human finger. | |
| 4 | In valley wife and daughter take their time (6) |
| DAWDLE – In DALE (valley) goes W(ife) and D(aughter) | |
| 6 | Trivial host — he upset nurse coming to house? (6,7) |
| HEALTH VISITOR – anagram (upset) of TRIVIAL HOST HE | |
| 7 | Suppose the old revolt? (8) |
| THEORISE – THE (the) O (old) RISE (revolt) | |
| 10 | Uncontrollable rage over the gang getting back together again (11) |
| REGATHERING – anagram (uncontrollable) of RAGE going over THE RING (the gang) | |
| 12 | Copper probing motives for political meetings (8) |
| CAUCUSES – Cu (Copper) probing CAUSES (motives). Etymology unknown. | |
| 15 | Chemical left at the bottom of store exploding (6) |
| STEROL – L(eft) at the bottom of an anagram (exploding) of STORE | |
| 17 | This should not be in wardrobe — mum has no hesitation (4) |
| MOTH – MOTHER (mum) has no ER (hesitation) | |
Edited at 2019-08-15 05:15 am (UTC)
I could not get past 3dn being ABSORPTION with a letter short thus leaving 13ac a dunno!
Further 20ac went in as SONG and 9ac as WARGAME – GAME being an edible item. All round bad thinking.
FOI 1ac LOMBARDY
LOI N/A
COD 11ac FIRELIGHTER (Dalmations come to mind)
WOD ST. IVES
For Kev, there are two St. Ives as Mr. Roly notes. One near Cambridge and t’other in Cornwall. The latter is the resort: the former has the Pig Lane Cop Shop.
The smallest village in all of England is New York in Lincolnshire. My grandfather built a Chapel there!
Mood Meldrewvian.
Edited at 2019-08-15 06:59 am (UTC)
Banjo
I too thought of ABSORPTION but managed to move away from it. I was stuck in HOVE for a while as the seaside town and thought Izetti might have chosen a rare religious holiday. As ever, the hidden was effective.
My big hold ups were ALSACE and LOI CAUCUSES where I had all the checking letters and spent ages trying to find the word. Was Copper PC or CU? In the end I found a synonym for Motives and the puzzle was done.
This will be a learning experience for many,and nothing wrong with that.
David
Edited at 2019-08-15 07:32 am (UTC)
NeilC
Overall it was a typical Izetti puzzle where the trickier answers gradually revealed themselves after careful reading of the clue. I found it of about average difficulty with my favourite being ABSTRACTION.
Thanks for the blog
FOI SHOT
LOI CAUCUSES
COD WARFARE
TIME 4:28
Edited at 2019-08-15 09:54 am (UTC)
In fact the only criticism I had was that in 3dn the word ‘Having’ seems to me to be unnecessary and even possibly unfairly misleading. If it were omitted the grammar would probably need a slight adjustment of ‘creates’, but surely this is possible.
Actually, a finish! Like some others, I also put in wargame – although warfare is clearly the superior answer. So a DNF today. Never mind, I still enjoyed the ride.
So I would say to anon, don’t give up – six months is early days. I’m not sure I completed many puzzles at all in those early months. And just think of the sense of satisfaction when you finally complete an Izetti puzzle! But I would also say, don’t be shy – give us a name (even if it is just tucked at the end of your post).
Time: about 15 minutes
FOI Lombardy (a rarity – I never usually get started with 1a!)
LOI Charioteers – I was determined that the applause was clap (no sniggering at the back please)
COD Oligarch – superb
Earworm – still Mr Blue Sky!!
Now off to the biggie – I’m expecting another workout today 😊
That’s a marked improvement. Now target the twenties….
Are Wargames real conflict? Kim Jong Un appears to think so!