This QC requires a smattering of mild GK (general knowledge), which I was fortunate enough to possess, despite my lack of a classical education. There was nothing unknown (for me) or unfair here, just some good clueing that demanded thought, and some neat surfaces.
FOI – PALACE, COD 13a (I’d love to know if the double duty is deliberate – see below) and WOD – DEICIDE. Thanks Izetti. Over to you, my dear readers.
Across
1 China has fantastic residence for ruler maybe (6)
PALACE – PAL (china, as in china plate = mate = pal from Cockney Rhyming Slang) and ACE (fantastic).
4 What to expect from member of family becoming minister (6)
PARSON – PAR (what to expect, e.g. from golf – the expected score for a hole) and SON (member of family).
8 Excuse criminal no more (7)
CONDONE – CON (criminal) and DONE (no more).
10 Like many a roof, bound to be penetrated by hail ultimately (5)
TILED – TIED (bound) containing (penetrated by) {hai}L (ultimately, last letter).
11 Tulip surprisingly bright in display? (3,2)
LIT UP – Anagram (surprisingly) of [TULIP].
12 Historian understood by you and me (7)
TACITUS – TACIT (understood or implied) and US (you and me). Publius Cornelius TACITUS is considered to be one of the greatest of Roman historians.
13 Vehicle black and dirty, not an attractive gem? (9)
CARBUNCLE – CAR (vehicle) and B{lack} followed by UNCLE{an} (dirty) and drop the last two letters – not an. The clue can be seen as a straight definition where a CARBUNCLE is a fiery-red precious stone. However, the clue is cleverly (possibly accidentally) constructed to allow the words ‘not an’ to appear to be doing double duty, first as the instruction to drop the AN from UNCLEAN, and second as a part of the definition if we think about an alternative use for CARBUNCLE as an architectural monstrosity or eyesore. I have highlighted the double duty words to illustrate this interpretation. The word was used in this sense by Prince Charles in his ‘monstrous carbuncle on the face of a much-loved and elegant friend’ speech relating to a plan for a modern extension to the National Gallery. That plan, by Peter Ahrends was subsequently scrapped and an alternative was built in 1991.
17 Sign in entrance letting number in (7)
PORTENT – PORT (entrance) containing TEN (letting number in).
19 We hear no sound from a horse (5)
NEIGH – Sounds like (we hear) NAY (no).
20 Revolutionary number left heading west (5)
LENIN – NINE (number) and L{eft} reversed (heading west).
21 Resolve to imprison one for a type of murder (7)
DEICIDE – DECIDE (resolve) containing (imprisoning) I (one). DEICIDE is the killing of a God.
22 Second piece of open country gets protection (6)
SHEATH – S{econd} and HEATH (open country).
23 It may see some balls in nets returned? (6)
TENNIS – Anagram (returned) of [IN NETS] inside a cryptic clue. On edit, thanks to Vinyl (see below), A simple reverse hidden (some, returned) in {ball}S IN NET{s}
Down
1 Choice the French relish (6)
PICKLE – PICK (choice) and LE (the in French).
2 I felt uncaring somehow in group of political extremists (7,6)
LUNATIC FRINGE – Anagram (somehow) of [I FELT UNCARING]
3 Hard to penetrate metal – here’s an axe (7)
CHOPPER – H{ard} inside (penetrating) COPPER (metal).
5 One about to shelter under a dry space in building (5)
ATTIC – I (one) and C (about / circa) beneath (sheltering under) A (a) and TT (dry – tee-total).
6 To discipline’s unusual: there is evidence of disagreement (5,8)
SPLIT DECISION – Anagram (unusual) of [TO DISCIPLINE’S]
7 One may barely enjoy being in a holiday camp (6)
NUDIST – Cryptic definition playing on the use of ‘barely’.
9 Handed over part of hospital that’s rotten (9)
ENTRUSTED – ENT (part of hospital – Ear, Nose and Throat department) and RUSTED (rotten).
14 I’d dance around as a character in satire (7)
CANDIDE – Anagram (around) of [I’D DANCE]. CANDIDE is the eponymous lead character in Voltaire’s satirical novella.
15 Splinters of wood in sheds (6)
SPILLS – Double definition, the first referring to the thin strips of wood used for lighting a fire (noun), the second to spill or shed something (verb).
16 Acclamation in church always before start of sermon (6)
CHEERS – CH{urch} followed by E’ER (poetic contraction of EVER / always) before (start of) S{ermon}.
18 Some patterns taken for painter (5)
ERNST – Hidden in {patt}ERNS T{aken}, referring to the German painter and dadaist Max ERNST.
I do have to inform our blogger that ‘tennis’ is simply a reverse hidden, not an anagram: some “[ball]S IN NET[s]”, returned.
Since 2006, the Carbuncle Cup is an architecture prize, awarded annually by the magazine ‘Building Design’ to “the ugliest building in the United Kingdom, completed within the last 12 months”.
‘The Brothers Jonathan’ are not quite up to speed, or woke?
Edited at 2019-10-31 07:43 am (UTC)
We comedic actors must stick together! I am ever wary of ‘The America First Brigade’ scalping the Native English Blogger simply because they don’t know their vocab. They tend to use a strongly dialectic variation (see Wilde). If only they would take pause.
Complete shower!
Victor
Whilst I’d agree that the clue works perfectly without ‘not an’ doing double duty, reading it that way does makes it potentially more amusing and diverting if one happens to know the ‘eyesore’ meaning. Unless the Don drops in we shall never know whether it was intentional or accidental but I’m glad you raised it as a point of interest.
Edited at 2019-11-01 12:18 am (UTC)
I have not found the architectural reference in any online dictionary, but of course it is merely a metaphorical extension of the medical sense, besides being utterly irrelevant to this clue, pace our diligent blogger.
Edited at 2019-10-31 03:20 pm (UTC)
A few tricky bits and pieces here including SPLIT DECISION for which I needed all but one checker in place before I was able to unravel the anagrist.
I wouldn’t have thought this meaning of ‘spill’ was UK dialect in the sense that it’s regional within the UK, not that I’m an expert, but none of the usual sources mention that point, and its in the ‘American meanings’ section of Collins online which is extracted from Webster’s.
Prince Charles’s metaphorical reference to a CARBUNCLE in his speech to the Royal Institute of British Architects in 1984 gave the word a new lease of life so I’m not surprised our blogger was reminded of that particular usage.
Edited at 2019-10-31 06:03 am (UTC)
FOI 1ac PALACE (ugh!)
LOI 22ac HEATH
COD 2dn LUNATIC FRINGE
WOD 13as CARBUNCLE
Enthuse on, Dude!
I forgot my time 7.45 mins.
Edited at 2019-10-31 08:22 am (UTC)
It would have taken me quite a while to find SPILLS I think but I do know the meaning.
Otherwise no problems.
David
Edited at 2019-10-31 08:09 am (UTC)
Held up by sheath, portent, entrusted, carbuncle, candide (dnk), and LOI spills. We had lots of spills in chemistry, both the wooden lighters and the other kind.
Some meanings that were crafty:
what to expect, par
Sheds, spills
Entrance, port
Heard of carbuncle but didn’t know what it was.
Cod tennis.
Edited at 2019-10-31 08:47 am (UTC)
John M.
Edited at 2019-10-31 09:15 am (UTC)
FOI TILED, LOI SPILLS, COD PARSON.
Thanks Izetti and Rotter.
Templar
Edited at 2019-10-31 11:41 am (UTC)
I’ve really struggled with the last few Izettis, but I enjoyed this one as each answer seemed to give me one checker which led to the next answer. Tacitus, Candide and Ernst were all dragged up from somewhere, I’m not sure how! LOI was DEICIDE which took me four minutes.
Thanks to all as usual.
Brian
Thanks for the blog
FOI PALACE
LOI “SPELLS”
COD CARBUNCLE
Bit of an arm-wrestle this morning but just about came out on top.
Many thanks to setter and blogger.
5’10”
Graham
I was unaware of the setter, as i use my phone, but it had the feel of Izetti.
Thanks for the blog and to the setter.
For some reason I didn’t get 15dn “Spills” and 22ac “Sheath”. Whilst “Tacitus”, “Candide” and “Deicide” were slotted in, I had my fingers crossed whether they were correct.
I also struggled with rusted=rotten for 9dn “Entrusted” and had all sorts of combinations before going with my gut.
Strangely, it had been going quite well at the start. Loved 13ac “Carbuncle” – took a while to understand the parsing of the “uncle”, but when it dropped I couldn’t help but chuckle.
Maybe it’s me – but I thought this was definitely on the harder side. However, I know for a fact that if I had been doing this a couple of years ago, I would probably have only got a third of the grid completed. So for anyone just starting, keep trying…!
I could not get 15D and had SPALTS until I read this.
I find the double word anagrams a challenge. At 2D had a strange vision of a political extremist group ‘farting nuclei’
Knew spills but opted for spelks which in the northeast are splinters of wood. (Spills don’t seem like splinters to me – too smooth.) Was hoping the blog would tell me where sheds came in – and it did.
Linda