Guardian 27,288 – Pan

Mostly very straightforward clueing from Pan (who is a recent addition to the cryptic slot, after many years of setting Quiptics), with only 7d causing me any difficulty in parsing. Pleasant enough, if not terribly exciting. Thanks to Pan.

 
 
 
 
 
 
Across
1. SCOPED Officer found with drug in empty shed is closely investigated (6)
COP (police officer) in S[he]D
5. RECIPE New price includes chemist’s third formula (6)
[ch]E[mist] in PRICE*
8. AMOROUS Passionate Australian given new room with American (7)
A + ROOM* + US
9. COMPACT Press agreement (7)
Double definition
11. EVENING PRIMROSE Regimen is proven to generate a flower (7,8)
(REGIMEN IS PROVEN)*
12. TONY Play bagging nation’s first award for acting (4)
N[ation] in TOY (to play). The Tony awards are named after the actress and director Antoinette “Tony” Perry
13. CASUALTIES People injured by throwaway matches? (10)
CASUAL TIES
17. ROTISSERIE Oven from Rio is reset differently (10)
(RIO IS RESET)*
18. STIR Commotion caused by heads of state talking in riddles (4)
First letters of State Talking In Riddles
20. NATIONAL SERVICE Flying alien contrives to secure a spell in the army? (8,7)
A in (ALIEN CONTRIVES)*
23. EXALTED Revered former editor pinching a large journalist’s bottom (7)
A L [journalis]T in EX-ED
24. RETRAIN Retired queen and retinue prepare for new job (7)
Reverse of E.R. + TRAIN
25. BENDER Heavy drinking session sees new head of department drowning in ale (6)
N D[epartment] in BEER
26. DINNER Revolutionary coming back to eat pub grub? (6)
INN (pub) in reverse of RED (communist, revolutionary)
Down
2. CLOSE-KNIT Stop king and fool becoming united by social ties (5-4)
CLOSE (stop) + K + NIT
3. PROLIX Verbose expert hearing short musical phrases (6)
PRO + homophone of “licks”
4. DESIGNATE Choose to throw giants’ pants in river (9)
GIANTS* in [River] DEE
5. RACER Bishop adopting star competitor (5)
ACE in RR (Right Reverend)
6. CAMOMILE Put in an appearance outside retro car plant (8)
Reverse of LIMO in CAME
7. PLATO Short coat given to old philosopher (5)
I think this is PLAT[E] (“cover (a metal object) with a thin coating of a different metal”, which could mean to coat) + O
8. AGENT ORANGE Herbicide makes a fellow a goner, unfortunately (5,6)
(A FELLOW A GONER)* oops! A GENT + (A GONER)* – Agent Orange was used as a defoliant by the US military in the Vietnam war
10. TREE SURGEON Troy’s first prophet turned up to encourage woodworker (4,7)
T + reverse of SEER + URGE ON
14. UNINSURED Without cover, nude run is rescheduled (9)
(NUDE RUN IS)*
15. INTRICATE Fancy popular gallery keeping racist leader in charge! (9)
R[acist] IC in IN (popular) TATE
16. ASSORTED Various roads set out (8)
(ROADS SET)*
19. BRETON Brother returned short letter to someone from Brest? (6)
BR + reverse of NOTE
21. TRACE Sign made by team leader at sporting event (5)
T[eam] + RACE. The online solution has “trade”, which must be a mistake (now corrected, I see)
22. ADDER Dared to wrestle a snake! (5)
ADDER* D’oh! – I mean DARED*, of course

39 comments on “Guardian 27,288 – Pan”

  1. Greg

    Thanks for the exposition Andrew. I had the same trouble as you with 21d – it drove me mad trying to figure out what was wrong. I also had my doubts about 7a, and came to the same conclusion as you.


  2. Thanks Pan and Andrew
    An obvious point, I suppose, but this would have been a very good Quiptic (much better than Anto’s yesterday). I parsed PLATO as you did, Andrew.


  3. btw misprint; AGENT ORANGE isn’t a complete anagram as you give, Andrew – “a fellow” is A GENT


  4. …and the fodder for ADDER is “dared” (it would be a bit too easy if it had been “adder”!)

  5. drofle

    Yes, not too exciting. Took me a bit of time to find CLOSE-KNIT, but apart from that seemed a bit Mondayish. I liked PROLIX and CASUALTIES. Thanks to Pan and Andrew.

  6. pex

    Andrew and drifle@5: Ditto

  7. Julie in Australia

    Favourites were 13a CASUALTIES, 2d CLOSE-KNIT, and 14d UNINSURED (I read the latter as NUDE NUNS, which was a great visual, but had to rethink when I checked the anagram).
    Thank you to Pan and Andrew.

  8. Flavia

    Pleasant enough, but could easily have fitted in the Quiptic slot.

  9. beery hiker

    Nothing here that would suggest that Pan is not a good next step to suit those looking to branch out from the Monday Rufus. All easy enough but very nicely crafted.

    Thanks to Pan and Andrew


  10. Thanks to Muffin for pointing out my careless errors – now corrected.


  11. Thanks Pan and Andrew.

    Yes, at the Quiptic end of the spectrum but enjoyable. I think to plate = to coat is fine.

    CASUALTIES took me about as long as the rest of the puzzle to fathom out, but a nice clue.

  12. michelle

    My favourites were CAMOMILE and CASUAL TIES.

    I’m glad that TRACE was correct!

    Thanks blogger and setter

  13. DaveMc

    Like others above, I found this puzzle to be a quick solve, almost like a second Rufus offering in a row. I enjoyed the anagram in 20a and thought there was some very nice surface cluing, particularly in several of the Down entries, including 2d, 4d, 8d, 14d, and 22d. LOI, and hardest for me, was CAMOMILE, as I am more familiar with this word when spelled with a “CH” at the beginning. Thanks to Pan and Andrew.

  14. DaveMc

    BTW — and apologies if others have made this same observation in the past — but I was thinking when solving 4d that if one had nothing but familiarity with crosswords to go on, one would think that the River Dee and the River Exe were among the most significant rivers in the world.

  15. Hovis

    For me, CASUALTIES was the stand out clue.


  16. Thank you Pan and Andrew.

    That was quick, but very pleasant – I was hoping for something more time consuming so as not to be tempted back into the battle with the Prize…

    CASUALTIES was my last in, I needed the crossers, now my favourite with PROLIX, CLOSE-KNIT and TREE SURGEON as runners-up.


  17. Good point DaveMc@14!!

    Like many others I found this relaxingly easy, mostly. Thanks to Pan and Andrew.

  18. Marienkaefer

    Thanks Pan and Andrew

    A gentle solve, with some enjoyable surfaces. As someone who used to work in the industry, I particularly enjoyed 14dn.

    DaveMc @14 – not forgetting the Po and the Ure.

  19. ACD

    Thanks to Pan and Andrew. I paused over the “plate” for PLATO but like others found this a quick but enjoyable solve.

  20. lancsolver

    I very much agree that this was a fairly straightforward challenge, though one minor quibble would be the cluing of A as Australian in AMOROUS- I haven’t come across this use of A previously. My personal favourites were BENDER, DINNER, CAMOMILE and TREE SURGEON. Thanks to Pan and Andrew

  21. Peter Aspinwall

    A quick solve-indeed,some seemed too easy to be true – but a competent puzzle. My only delay was the parsing of SCOPED. I don’t think I’ve come across the word used in this way before.
    CASUALTIES was the pick of the bunch.
    Thanks Pan.


  22. In 4D, what is the word “pants” doing there?


  23. Steven @22
    I took it as the anagram indicator (“It’s pants” meaning “it’s terrible) for GIANTS, which is then “thrown into” the river.

  24. El Inglés

    I finished this in good order but didn’t copletely parse 10D


  25. muffin: Thanks. I did not know the expression “It’s pants”, and it had seemed to me that “thrown into” was enough to suggest mixing, so the “pants” seemed superfluous.


  26. El Ingles: “Troy’s first” is T. “Prophet turned up” is REES (seer turned up). “To encourage” is URGE ON.


  27. Steven @25
    It’s not an expression that I’d ever consider using!

  28. WhiteKing

    Pants is in common usage among the generations younger than most crossword solvers and I thought it was inventive as an anagrind – although it’s probably been used before.
    Like others have said it was a pleasant solve clearly clued. Thanks Pan and Andrew.

  29. Jovis

    What a lot of patronising comments, “damning with faint praise”!

    I enjoyed it but still don’t get PROLIX. What is the homophone here?


  30. Licks – guitar breaks.

    Faint praise indeed – it wasn’t very good.

  31. Jovis

    Thanks, but what is a guitar break??

  32. Jovis

    Don’t worry, found it on Google. ?somewhat recondite


  33. Familiar in certain circles, but I agree that it is possibly not in general usage.

  34. Alphalpha

    Hurray for Pan’s promotion and thanks Andrew for the blog.

    I enjoyed this, so that’s all that matters really? I could have lived without the Right Reverend Bishop and the fact that I am familiar with EVENING PRIMROSE, and NATIONAL SERVICE is just an an an anachronism, even for putative antiques like me: 60 years ago now?

    But good stuff for a Tuesday imho.

  35. pex

    Cookie @ 16 (if you’re still around). I decided yesterday not to waste more hours on the impossible ‘prize’. I’ve left it at a friends so as not to be tempted.

  36. Flavia

    The Prize certainly isn’t impossible — a lovely feeling of triumph (in spite of a couple of quibbles) when it all fell into place. Looking forward to comments on Sat.

  37. BNTO

    I thought one wasn’t supposed to comment on a current prize puzzle. Please desist as all comments have information in them which isn’t welcome to some solvers. (How hard is this to understand?!!)

    P.S. This is a comment on “comments on the prize” before anyone comes back with the obvious puerile comment! 😉

  38. BNTO

    What’s all this “damned by faint praise” and “it wasn’t very good”?

    This puzzle was crap! Too easy even for a Quiptic. Some strange cluing and if one can use Australian for “A” then one can use any country’s adjective for it’s first letter. Nonsense!

    Obviously an editor hasn’t been near this.

  39. Sil van den Hoek

    BNTO, ‘some strange cluing’?
    Tell us about it.

    Too easy, even for a Quiptic?
    That’s not a fair criticism.
    What is ‘too easy’ anyway.
    And is that a criterion for a crossword being good or not good??

    ‘A’ is in the dictionaries for ‘Australian’.

    Obviously an editor hasn’t been near this.
    Sometimes we can indeed point a finger at him, though not today.

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