Inquisitor 1467: Multiplication by Radler

Preamble: Answers to the eleven asterisked clues must be changed to a related word of the same length before entry. All other clues have a single-letter misprint: the correct letters (in clue order) provide a clue to a twelfth word (5) which, similarly treated, should be highlighted in appropriate form in the completed grid. Unchecked and mutually unchecked letters of themed answers might make “THICKHEAD IRATE – AM I OK?”

Wow, I found this to be quite tough. And with real life constantly getting in the way, I didn’t actually finish until a week after publication thus allowing me just enough time to panic before bluing my dog(!) And, er, of course the UK Snooker Championship got in the way.

The fact that the thematic grid entries bore no direct reference to their clues and that the other clues contained misprints that could be anywhere rather than the more traditional definition part, made it a bit of a struggle (I won’t say slog, for fear of upsetting people.)

First thematic to fall (actually the first clue to fall) was MOURNER. Somehow I thought of collective nouns on reading the preamble. I’d never heard of a CORTÈGE of mourners but a quick internet search led me to this Wikipedia entry. iq1467

The full list of eleven thematic, answers in normal grid order, follows:

Clue Answer
Collection
1a ARROW SHEAF
5a MOURNER CORTÈGE
15a HAIR LOCK
27a FROG ARMY
29a LISTENER AUDIENCE
34a COCKROACH INTRUSION
10d GOAT HERD
12d CAMEL TRAIN
17d FINCH CHARM
25d WOLF PACK
30d CARD DECK

The last few pieces of the puzzle for me were 3d (ARES) – took ages to work out the misprint having been convinced it was OLYMPIAD. In 25a I wanted the misprint to be BORN hence entry starting B thus making 25d start with B. And I wasn’t making much sense of the hidden message.

I knew that I should set about using the unchecked letter information but I couldn’t force myself to trawl through. However, for blogging purposes I stuck the grid into Excel and found them.

So, on to the hidden message, with the usual problem of a couple of letters being wrong or missing (for example, 4d GRUBS replacing GRABS, and 23d taking ages to justify) the message revealed itself as PINCH BOTTOM AND ASS SO EGO SUFFERS. The wordplay leads to a double definition – GOOSE means PINCH BOTTOM  and a GOOSE is a stupid person (ASS); SO EGO (anag: suffers) gives us GOOSE. One collective noun for geese is SKEIN so I set about finding SKEIN (this being its appropriate form as a collective noun.) BUT, wait a minute, I see S-K-E-I in c4-d5-e6-f7 followed by S in g8 – SKEIS is obviously wrong so what have I done wrong? 26d can’t possibly be NCARS. can it? There are only four K’s in the grid and none of the others are next to an S. Then I saw that there’s an N in g7 but it’s very unusual for hidden words to not be in straight lines. Thinking back on for a minute, re-read the preamble. Aha, appropriate form means more than just the collective noun form, it means the shape that a SKEIN of geese generally take. It’s there in c4-d5-e6-d7-c8 in a V shape.

One final thought, what do you call a collection of snooker players? A Crucible of cueists?? Or in the case of the UK Championship, a Barbican of balls??

Anyway, thanks a lot to Radler for a good bit of fun albeit on the tougher side (for me at least.)

Across



Clue
Entry
Correct letter
Wordplay
1* Quarrel? A right noisy
one! (5)
SHEAF
(ARROW)

A+Right+ROW (noisy one)
5* Person at funeral more
upset having to carry
ashes? (7)
CORTÈGE
(MOURNER)

MORE (anag: upset) containing URN (ashes)
9 What moves
squad occasionally
flatters platters Carol when
drunk (9, 2 words)
PATROL CAR P
PlAtTeRs (occasionally)+CAROL anag: drunk
11 Sensor senior shows danger,
look to the left (5)
OLDER I
RED (danger)+LO (look) rev: to the left
12 Creep’s request to Turk turn
to stop cup match (6)
TIPTOE N
PTO (please turn over: request to turn) inside TIE (cup match)
14 From one flying to
another marriage carriage,
shaping a trio (8)
AIR-TO-AIR C
AIR (carriage)+A TRIO (anag: shaping)
15* Rocker, perhaps, losing
lead in musical (4)
LOCK
(HAIR)

cHAIR (rocker, perhaps; losing lead)
16 Dad had wasted with Double
Diamonds (4)
ICED H
ICE (diamonds)+Diamonds
18 I just bust miss more
when the same parts
are structured
differently (9)
ISOMERISM B
I+MISS MORE (anag: bust)
22 Move around, repeat,
not cut out inside (9)
ITINERATE O
ITERATE (repeat) containing IN (not out)
25 Barn tarn: a unit of
measurement (4)
POND T
(double def)
27* Work for German
swimmer (4)
ARMY
(FROG)

FOR (anag: work)+German
29* One attending
treatment of silent
American casualty (8)
AUDIENCE
(LISTENER)

SILENT + ER (casualty: Emergency Room (in America))
32 Impure impute belief (6) CREDIT T
(double def)
33 Is the air force ever over
providing means
to communicate
in Iran? (5)
FARSI O
IS+RAF (Royal Air Force) rev: over
34* Pest flitting around
Cork in train (9)
INTRUSION
(COCKROACH)

CORK (anag: flitting around) inside COACH (train)
35 Vigorously rake moss
discarding vile mile rocks (7)
ARKOSES M
RAKE mOSS (minus Mile) anag: vigorously
36 Telling stories to make
it at rest (5)
LYING A
(double def)

 

Down



Clue
Entry
Correct letter
Wordplay
1 Focused attention
of on betters, on the up
literally (7)
SPOTLIT N
TOPS (betters; rev: on the up)+LITerally
2 Greeting using
beep deep? Essentially,
the opposite (5)
HALLO D
sHALLOw (opposite of DEEP; essentially)
3 Skint saint period turns up
for Olympian (4)
ARES A
Saint+ERA (period) rev: turns up
4 Grabs grass etc. to get on (6) FORAGE S
FOR (to)+AGE (get on)
5 Why shy person’s guarding
one’s right (5)
CLAIM S
CLAM (shy person) containing I (one)
6 Cook a rat in is Indian
dishes (6)
RAITAS S
A RAT IS (anag: cook)
7 Intergovernmental
organisation’s decade decode
of fate (4)
EFTA
(European Free Trade Association)
O
FATE (anag: decode)
8 Move past edges –
nothing – I swept sweet,
superlatively? (7)
GOOIEST
(superlative of GOO)
E
GOEST (old word for go: move) containing O (nothing)+I
10* Vigorously attack dirty
old man (4)
HERD
(GOAT)

GO AT (vigorously attack)
12* Pale brown became
lighter on the inside (5)
TRAIN
(CAMEL)

beCAME Lighter (hidden: on the inside)
13 Dosh gosh hiding among tin
refuse (5)
SCORN G
COR (gosh) inside SN (tin)
17* Singer fellow attacked
on board (5)
CHARM
(FINCH)

Fellow+IN CH (in check: attacked on [chess] board)
(I think I have this one right but I’m more than prepared to be told otherwise)
19 Cleaner’s locker looker? (7) SCOURER O
(double def)
20 Laughing King’s kingsize
legs less first to go (5)
RIANT S
R (king)+gIANT (minus Go (first))
21 Grey ink: Ron run, this
will join lock
workers (7, 2 words)
KEY RING
(lock workers being keys)
U
GREY INK (anag: run)
23 Links held North forth Asian
hotels together (6)
TIE-INS F
Sounds like: held forth THAI (Asian)+INNS (hotels)
24 Old solver cracks cryptic
clue flue – a beauty! (6)
EYEFUL F
YE ([old] you: the solver) inside FLUE (anag: cracked)
25* Run over ladies’ man (4) PACK
(WOLF)

FLOW (run; rev: over)
26 Leaving fast east alarms Cliff
and Mark (5)
SCARS E
SCAReS (alarms; minus East)
28 Percy Perry, perhaps, or one of
the brothers (5)
MASON R
(double def)
Perry MASON
30* Plastic comb? (4) DECK
(CARD)

(double def)
31 Light year yeas away (4) EASY S
YEAS (anag: away)

 

18 comments on “Inquisitor 1467: Multiplication by Radler”

  1. I breezed through the first few clues and then had to put it aside for a day, assuming that I’d be able to come back to it and complete it in one short session … how wrong I was! Five days later I shaded in the final IN with a smile, and a mixed sense of relief and satisfaction. Looking back, a real corker of a puzzle with interest maintained throughout and all the elements helping with the final solve, the unchecked letters for example helping me to sort out ARMY and INTRUSION. I didn’t have any question marks at the end, my closest being the parsing of FINCH at 17D, which I had the same as kenmac.

    Thanks to kenmac and Radler for an occasionally frustrating but ultimately satisfying and rewarding challenge.

  2. I found this heavy going – the misprints were very difficult to spot in many cases. I struggled through, despite having spotted the theme with sheaf and cortege almost immediately. My final SKEIN was in d4-d5-e6-f7-g7, but kenmac’s is a better shape.
    I was delayed by having the misprint in 20D as T (leTs instead of leSs) and wondering what Phil Tuffnell (Tuffers) had to do with it.
    Unlike OPatrick I couldn’t parse 8D (GOOIEST) and can’t really accept kenmac’s explanation. What does the word “edges” have to do with the clue, and how do you arrive at the letters EST? I can’t see any wordplay for them and the clue isn’t even remotely &lit-ish.

  3. @2-@3-@4: It was one of those that I managed to justify while solving but when it came blogging I had no idea.

    Thanks OPatrick – blog has been corrected.

  4. Like others, I thought this was going to be a breeze, as I guessed the theme (helpful title this week) rather early. And, like others, it turned out to be tough going, and solving the clue didn’t always guide me to the ‘correct’ letter (nor did guessing the multiple always guide me to the singular). But I thought it was enjoyably challenging, not a slog. Thanks to Radler and kenmac.

    Surely a collection of snooker players should be a rack?

  5. Thanks for puzzle and blog. I too found it quite a struggle in spite of an early jump from ARROW, MOURNER and LISTENER to the Multiplication theme. At least one “it has to be that but I can’t quite justify it” remained at the end, and then I spent a while trying to persuade myself that d4-d5-e6-f7-g7 (as at @2) was an “appropriate form” before very belatedly spotting the V formation.

  6. We guessed the theme early on but as others have noted, it still took a great deal of sorting out.

    We worked out everything apart from the very last step probably because we weren’t looking for SKEIN!

    Thanks to kenmac and Radler.

  7. Like others, I found the theme quickly but finding the misprints tough on the whole, esp. where these were wordplay references to anagrams e.g. 18A, ‘bust’ instead of ‘just’ etc. rather than, as kenmac says,being in the definition. That said I thought there was just enough to guess entries and ‘backfill’ misprints and definitions, to give me encouragement to keep going, so a really good puzzle for my money.

    In the end I just couldn’t see ‘Camel’ in 12D and oncluded that the wordplay yielded Caramel without the ‘ra’ i.e. lighter on the inside…d’oh. Somtehing here about Occam’s razor ….or don’t go looking for convoluted explanations when the obvious one will do !

    Many thanks Radler and to kenmac.

  8. Another nearly there but not quite…

    Filled the grid OK, but failed on the final part. I had overlooked one letter S in the misprints so could not make sense of my malformed additional clue.

    I also did not get a couple of the asterisked clues, but this did not seem to be a problem. It was easy to guess the grid entries without solving the clues and in the end I ignored some of them. By this time the grid was full and verified by the THICKHEAD anagram so the remaining clues seemed redundant and I lost interest. I think this was perhaps the only weakness with the puzzle.

    Hard work but very enjoyable. Thanks to both Radler and kenmac.

  9. I’m another who highlighted the ‘wrong’ SKEIN (and like David @12, seeing it the week before made it come quickly to mind). I ought to have realised that it looked more like a flat boomerang than a true V but having spotted it I just shaded and didn’t think to look any further.

    My completed grid was really a joint effort with Terrier, although I think he didn’t make the same mistake as me at the end. Like several others have commented, we found many of the incorrect letters very tricky to locate.

    Thanks to Radler and kenmac.

  10. CORRECTION on today’s IQ1469 by Schadenfreude:

    The letter count on 5dn should be (7, 3 words).

    A correction will appear with next week’s puzzle, but I would be grateful if in the meantime solvers would spread the word. Thanks!

    John

  11. I’m afraid to say that I didn’t enjoy this as much as others seem to have. The first few ‘changed’ entries for me were SHEAF, LOCK, DECK, CORTÈGE, which to my mind aren’t collective nouns as such, apart from possibly DECK. (Compare, for example, a QUIRE of paper, with a FLOCK of sheep.) So there was a lot of cold-solving and a filled grid with over half the asterisked clues unsolved, the intended theme becoming apparent only sometime later.

    To top it all off, I highlighted the same SKEIN as did Hi (@2) and others. Hmph.

    Q: What do you call two crows on a branch?

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