Introduction
Finished in 9:23. I had hoped for something a bit faster as I’ve been working on improving my speed. But when the pressure’s on, I seem to slow down! In any case, a tricky puzzle with some unknown words for me. Maybe half the clues went in from definition alone, so I’ll be figuring out the wordplay on the fly.
Solutions
While writing up the blog, I realized this was a themed puzzle. What a delight, as my sons and I are reading Michael Bond’s A Bear Called Paddington these days.
In this puzzle, we have PADDINGTON (10a) Bear from DARKEST (4a) PERU (1d), sent to England by his AUNT (18d) LUCY (2d). His favorite food is MARMALADE (3d), which he often enjoys in SANDWICH (13d) form. He’s often depicted in a yellow MAC (21d). In the last and most memorable of Michael Bond’s timeless tales, Paddington falls on HARD (19d) times and lands in PRISON (16d), where he develops an OPIUM (20a) addiction and becomes obsessed with DE SADE (4d). Finally, he takes his own life with a SPATULA (22d). Etc.
Checked the unches for any references to Michael Bond, ‘bear’, etc, but couldn’t find anything. Also I’m not aware of any relevance of the date 24 June to either the author or the story. Clearly, Felix must have simply known that I have Paddington on the brain. Someone please do a Pooh/Milne puzzle for me!
Across
| 1 | One dressed in purple [finding] old javelin (5) |
|
PILUM – I (one) in PLUM (purple) An old Roman javelin. |
|
| 4 | Most obscure desk art rubbished (7) |
| DARKEST – anagram of DESK ART | |
| 8 | Chronicles concerned with trousers (7) |
|
RECORDS – RE + CORDS (trousers) From ‘corduroy jeans’, I believe. |
|
| 9 | Their sharp points scratch this, at intervals? (5) |
|
CACTI – every other letter of SCRATCH THIS A bit loose as a definition. “Their sharp points scratch” could be a definition but then ‘scratch’ does double duty. |
|
| 10 | Railway station put out some pop, adding to noise (10) |
|
PADDINGTON – hidden in POP ADDING TO NOISE My sons and I are reading A Bear Called Paddington these days, so it came immediately to mind, though I delayed putting it in because I couldn’t figure out the wordplay. Eventually I got the answer from the crossing letters, but still didn’t see the sneaky hidden word until writing the blog, where even then I was confused for a minute or two! |
|
| 14 | Girl going with sailor [to see] film (6) |
|
AVATAR – AVA (girl) + TAR (sailor) 2009 James Cameron animated film with blue thingies. |
|
| 15 | Gazes fixedly, flight being heard (6) |
| STARES – homophone of STAIRS (flight) | |
| 17 | Admires loo after refurbishment: this one? (6,4) |
| LADIES ROOM – anagram of ADMIRES LOO | |
| 20 | After work, I’m swallowing universal painkiller (5) |
| OPIUM – OP (work) + I’M around U (universal) | |
| 22 | Kitchen utensil put, alas, in the wrong places (7) |
| SPATULA – anagram of PUT ALAS | |
| 23 | Medic greeting Rod’s short hairstyle (7) |
| MOHICAN – M.O. (medic) + HI (greeting) + CANE (rod) without the last letter | |
| 24 | Auditor’s seen in place (5) |
|
SITED – homophone of SIGHTED (seen) Never heard ‘sited’ used in this way, but it makes sense. |
Down
| 1 | Land [in] gym before football game (4) |
| PERU – P.E. (gym) + R.U. (football game) | |
| 2 | Girl fortunate to have avoided work, ultimately (4) |
| LUCY – LUCKY (fortunate) without last letter of WORK | |
| 3 | Preserve horse for transporting mother and boy (9) |
| MARMALADE – MARE (horse) around MA + LAD | |
| 4 | Overrides a decision to include controversial nobleman (2,4) |
|
DE SADE – hidden in OVERRIDES A DECISION Another hidden I couldn’t find until writing the blog. |
|
| 5 | Legendary bird[’s] goodness recalled (3) |
| ROC – COR (goodness!) reversed | |
| 6 | Climb initially into exotic tea tree and rest (2,6) |
|
ET CETERA – first letter of CLIMB in anagram of TEA TREE And *the* rest, as we say in English, but I’ll allow it! |
|
| 7 | Most meagre pub in the street (8) |
| THINNEST – INN (pub) in THE + ST. (street) | |
| 11 | In no atlas, strangely, [will you find] a country’s inhabitants (9) |
| NATIONALS – anagram of IN NO ATLAS | |
| 12 | Function venue one used to sweep round completely (8) |
| BALLROOM – BROOM (one used to sweep) around ALL (completely) | |
| 13 | Submarine, perhaps, [making for] Kentish port once (8) |
|
SANDWICH – double definition “While once a major port, [Sandwich, Kent] is now two miles from the sea due to the disappearance of the Wantsum Channel.” (Wikipedia) |
|
| 16 | Voting system is possible [as] form of punishment! (6) |
| PRISON – PR (voting system) + IS ON (is possible) | |
| 18 | Relative[’s] jibe when head goes missing (4) |
| AUNT – TAUNT (jibe) without first letter | |
| 19 | Difficult / set (4) |
| HARD – double definition | |
| 21 | Old woman, cold, [finds] coat (3) |
| MAC – MA (old woman) + C (cold) |
I had taken ages to work out the unknown PILUM so I was going to be in my red zone (>15 minutes) anyway, but what did for me was confidently writing SCENE at 24ac (like vinyl1 above) which then made 18dn and 19dn impossible to solve.
I had been looking for a Nina because Felix (actually the Times Crossword Editor) had given us 4 rather spectacular Ninas over his previous 7 outings, so it seemed likely there might be another one, but unfortunately I know nothing about Paddington Bear so I was never going to spot it.
Edited at 2020-06-24 04:01 am (UTC)
A poor day for me. No time provided as I got one wrong, but well over 25m including coffee top up.
Thanks Felix.
Edited at 2020-06-24 05:47 am (UTC)
Edited at 2020-06-24 05:53 am (UTC)
Didnt pick up on the theme – never do
Thanks all
Seeing the paddington theme might have helped me get comfortable with darkest for most obscure earlier.
COD records.
PS where is Mr Horryd?
Edited at 2020-06-24 07:27 am (UTC)
Wish I’d spotted the nina. I love Paddington.
NHO PILUM, but enjoyed this.
I totally agree with you about names.
Diana
Edited at 2020-06-24 08:06 am (UTC)
Thanks to Jeremy and Felix
Sandwich appears again to remind me of this year’s Open golf championship,now postponed to 2021. A good puzzle; COD to PRISON.
Before coming here I checked the puzzle for ninas and completely missed the Paddington story. Well done -again- to Felix,and well spotted Jeremy.
David
Edited at 2020-06-24 11:13 am (UTC)
Anyway. I really enjoyed that and came in at K + 4 seconds, which is an Excellent Day. If only I hadn’t paused to enjoy the Nina (spotted for once) along the way. I noticed one more Nina element – Paddington gives people of whom he disapproves HARD (19dn) STARES (15ac), and I’m now going to have to give Jeremy one of those for saying that Paddington’s duffel coat is a MAC, and another for inventing such a dark ending in his blog. Bad Jeremy!
FOI PILUM, LOI MOHICAN, COD … well it has to be PADDINGTON, doesn’t it?
Many thanks to Felix for such a witty puzzle, and thanks for the blog Jeremy.
Templar
Actually I’m with you on MAC. At least in the original he certainly isn’t wearing one, although Mrs Brown wants to buy him one in an early chapter.
However when you search for it online it’s quite clear that there are many images of Paddington in a plastic raincoat, so I figured this must be the reference. I don’t know exactly where it comes from.
Scrolling down, I see that lots of others have mentioned it’s a hidden – I should read everything first!
Edited at 2020-06-24 11:35 am (UTC)
Thanks though
It does say “hidden in […]”.
I wonder which Paddington book featured de Sade?
Thanks to Felix and to Jeremy for explaining all the parsing that I missed.
Brian
After completion, I did my usual scan for Ninas or themes, and Paddington shone out. I didn’t spot all the references, but there was enough in what I did know (DARKEST PERU, MARMALADE SANDWICH, AUNT LUCY) to see the theme. Excellent puzzle!
Thanks for the very helpful blog and a clever puzzle!
Liked sandwich
Not a great day.
Quite a tricky offering from Felix which almost took me over my target, but a pleasure to solve. I had the same problem as Louisajaney with NATIONALS, and was another who caused an unwarranted “scene”.
FOI DARKEST
LOI AVATAR
COD MOHICAN
TIME 0.64K
My last two took an age. They were DE SADE (another hidden) and after an alphabet trawl PRISON. 14 mins. I realised that while I had heard of DE SADE I did not know anything about him. Now I have researched him I’m not sure I needed to know!
I didn’t spot the theme until entering PADDINGTON itself and, like some others, I did not know PILUM but (with PERU, LUCY and MARMALADE in place) it couldn’t really have been anything else.
Again, several CODs to choose from but I think I’ll settle for LADIES ROOM which made me smile.
Thanks to Felix and to Jeremy (and fingers crossed for a Pooh theme soon!)
Thanks Jeremy for the tragic-comic end to the Paddington story. For those of you who haven’t seen it, the poor bear actually does go to prison in the second film. Spoiler alert: fortunately he gets out! All the same, the juxtaposition of bear and marquis makes the mind boggle.
FOI Darkest
LOI de Sade (didn’t see the hidden)
COD Sandwich, although Ladies room was very good too
Time 15 mins
Thanks Felix and Jeremy for the entertainment
That led to a slow for me 16 minute finish, with the last two in being the two hiddens at 4D De Sade and 10A Paddington. Why I find it hard to spot hiddens is one of life’s many mysteries but these were good ones. On the other hand 1A Pilum was my FOI, with exactly the same mental image of a British lawnkeeper from Asterix that Templar had!
A very enjoyable workout and COD to 16D Prison. Very nicely constructed – is it the case that crossword setters sometimes use exclamation marks when even they think the clue is quite clever?
Thanks to Jeremy for the blog.
Cedric
Edited at 2020-06-24 01:16 pm (UTC)
FOI 4ac darkest
LOI 1dn Peru
COD 7dn thinnest
FOI: pilum (and WOD)
LOI: prison
COD: ladies room
Thanks to Jeremy for the blog
However, after inventing a new country for 11dn “Latinoans”, I managed to pull myself together and complete/correct all in 35 mins.
I biffed 10ac “Paddington” but thought it as an anagram as well (didn’t spot the hidden word) and DNK 1ac “Pilum” but worked it out. Delighted that the film for once was actually a film and not ET – will we ever see those Avatar sequels?
FOI – 15ac “Stares”
LOI – 7dn “Thinnest”
COD – 14ac “Avatar” or 23ac “Mohican”
Didn’t spot the Nina either. Thanks as usual.
Sorry about PILUM which is borderline fora QC
Felix, what inspired this Paddington puzzle?
Edited at 2020-06-24 02:04 pm (UTC)
FOI: pilum (not that I had ever heard of this)
LOI: de sade
COD: ladies room
Edited at 2020-06-24 07:46 pm (UTC)
I don’t know what a submarine has to do with a sandwich though. Thank you for the answers I couldn’t get them all.