Financial Times 15,665 by MONK

This is an anniversary milestone puzzle.  Thank you Monk, congratulations and many more to come please!  There is one clue I need help with.  Any takers?

The 100TH FT FOR MONK.

Across
8 LOGORRHOEA Horologer put out by a tendency to verbosity (10)
anagram (put out) of HOROLOGER then A
9 RARE Excellent results at risk, even when “firsts” are considered (4)
first letters of Results At Risk Even
10 BASILICA Chap getting short tart to go round Roman building (8)
BASIL (chap, man’s name) the ACId (tart, short) reversed (to go round)
11 GENEVA Retaliate about relocating grand European city (6)
AVENGE reversed (about) with G E (grand, European) moved to the front (reallocated)
12 APOGEE Culmination of self-inflicted damage in a slash? (6)
OG (own goal, self inflicted damage) in A PEE (slash, urinate)
14 INEDIBLE Difficult to believe credit will be cut, or hard to swallow? (8)
INcrEDIBLE (difficult to believe) missing CR (credit)
15 IN THIS DAY AND AGE Now dating, Ian’s heady, all in a flutter (2,4,3,3,3)
anagram (all in a flutter) of DATING IAN’S HEADY
18 DISRAELI Duke standing by national PM (8)
D (duke) with ISRAELI (national)
20 FASTEN Very little gun clip? (6)
FA (sweet FA, very little) and STEN (gun)
22 INCHED Whipped top off and proceeded with caution (6)
pINCHED (whipped) missing top letter
23 NEEDLESS Gratuitous enmity, extremely seditious (8)
NEEDLE (enmity) and SeditiouS (extremes of)
25  E-FIT With which dials can be fine- tuned on screen (1-3)
I can’t even guess this one.  cryptic definition – E-FIT is a form of identikit in which faces (dials) can be fine-tuned on a computer screen.  Thanks to Hovis for this.
26 ASSOCIATED Hung out with old spies tailing fool they’d regularly missed (10)
O (old) CIA (spies) following (tailing) ASS (fool) then ThEy’d missing every other letter (regularly missed)
Down
1 IOWA Area south of an island state (4)
A (area) underneath (south of, on a map) IOW (Isle of Wight)
2 OOZING Loves to have energy flowing slowly (6)
O O (love, zero tennis score) twice then ZING (energy)
3 ORBITERS Is Robert recycling space junk? (8)
anagram (recycling) of IS ROBERT
4 TOTALITARIANISM Ordered militants to adopt song in advocacy of tyranny (15)
anagram (ordered) of MILITANTS TO containing (to adopt) ARIA (song)
5 HAGGLE Wrangle over goods with robust packaging (6)
G G (goods, twice) inside (with…packaging) HALE (robust)
6 FRENZIED Mad extremist interrupting Liberal Democrat, missing answer (8)
NaZI (extremist) missing A (answer) inside (interrupting) FREE (liberal) and D (democrat)
7 TRAVELOGUE Somehow alter Vogue article re passage (10)
anagram (somehow) of ALTER VOGUE
13 PENSION OFF Writers backed chief out to retire with deal? (7,3)
PENS (writers) NO I (No 1, chief) reversed (backed) then OFF (out)
16 HIROHITO Almost let US state host Tokyo’s first emperor (8)
HIRe (let, almost) then OHIO (US state) contains (hosts) Tokyo (first letter of)
17 ALFRESCO Escape into fresh flora in the open air (8)
ESC (escape, on keyboard) in anagram (fresh) of FLORA
19 ENDEAR Please destroy organ (6)
END (destroy) EAR (organ, of the body)
21 SYLVAN Tree-lined part of Dracula’s birthplace (6)
found inside (part of) tranSYLVANia (Dracula’s birthplace)
24 SEEK Left out of stylish attempt (4)
SLEEK (stylish) missing L (left)

definitions are underlined

I write these posts to help people get started with cryptic crosswords.  If there is something here you do not understand ask a question; there are probably others wondering the same thing.

20 comments on “Financial Times 15,665 by MONK”

  1. Salutations Brother Monk. And like PeeDee says in his terrific blog, keep ’em coming.

    And a personal first for me: I spotted the Nina.

  2. I spotted FT and MONK but seeing DIABLIO creeping up put me off the punch line.
    Great stuff and fine blog. Thanks PeeDee and Monk

  3. Another enjoyable (and not too difficult) crossword from my perhaps favourite FT setter (he’s surely in my Top 5).
    I saw ‘for Monk’ but not the top row!
    Actually, I started in the middle of the left column and read ‘I die for Monk’ …..
    Couldn’t be it.
    Just for a moment, but only very very short, I thought the ‘chap’ in BASILICA might be me ….. 🙂
    (after another half-nod at 21d)

    Thank you PeeDee and the Birthday Child for the fun.

  4. Missed the top row of the Nina – at least the FOR MONK bit is now explained. Most went in reasonably smoothly though I couldn’t parse a few such as FRENZIED. The Nina helped in the SW corner where I was stuck for a while. I thought E-FIT was an excellent cryptic def and was my last in.

    Congrats to Monk on his centenary and thanks to PeeDee.

  5. Congratulations to Monk and thank you for a crossword that kept me working for a long time, even after I’d spotted the Nina.

    Thanks to PeeDee too

  6. Congratulations Monk! Very enjoyable crossword. I missed the parsing for FRENZIED so many thanks PeeDee.

    Can someone please explain to me why the cryptic grammar in 4d and 16d is ok? The surface works but cryptically I would have thought this needed adopts/adopting and hosts/to host/hosting – am I missing something?

    I liked the indirect nature of GENEVA and SYLVAN. APOGEE made me laugh, as did FASTEN.

    I wondered whether the two long clues, 4d with 15a, was a political statement – maybe just my mind.

    Many thanks Monk and PeeDee

  7. Dutch @10 – I don’t think there is a straightforward explanation. I think one has to conjure up some implied context to get the clues to work seamlessly.

    In 4dn you might read it like a newspaper headline: “police to adopt new tactics”, implying that this is what will happen in the near future (ie when you write in the solution). In 16dn you might read host as the third person plural: “In the solution these previous words host the following…”. I think they are justifiable but as you imply maybe not as pleasing to read as some of the other clues.

  8. Thanks Peedee@11. I can perhaps see a plural fodder as subject in 16d. 4d is tricky since ‘to’ is in the anagram fodder, hence can’t be part of the indicator without doing double duty. But again, perhaps the school of thought is that the fodder may be considered plural (more than one word or letter?) though I confess that feels strange to me, perhaps naively I think of fodder as a single entity.

  9. Interesting question, Dutch.

    In 4d, it is an anagram of MILITANTS and TO that goes around ARIA.
    In my opinion, this only justifies ‘adopt’ if we see the building stones MILITANTS and TO as two things – whatever happens to them.
    However, if you see the clue as (MILITANTS + TO)* around ARIA, with the final anagram as one thing, there is a good reason to find it questionable.
    Personally, I am not sure here (yet).
    Benefit of the doubt, perhaps?

    16d can easily be justified as HIR[e] and OHIO (two things) go together around T.
    But true, it is just the OHIO bit that really does the surrounding.

    You say: perhaps […] I think of fodder as a single entity.
    That is indeed a way to look at it but many (often Ximenean and/or more precise) setters would happily disagree.

  10. Richard @12 – oops, egg on face! I had intended “anniversary” in a general sense to mean something like a “significant and regular recurrence”, but now I look Chambers does not support that. The idea was that it was vague and did not give too much away, it could just as easily have been about a (non-existent) theme of the puzzle, a birthday or a historical event.

  11. Sil @14, and Dutch – here are two versions of a sentence about baking:

    Take the three ingredients, mix them up and put them into the bowl. They will improve overnight.

    Take the three ingredients, mix them up and put it into the bowl. It will improve overnight.

    It is the version that still treats the mixture as plural that sounds right, even though the mixture is in fact a singular entity. Unless “the mixture” is mentioned explicitly it is still treated in the plural. For example

    Take the three ingredients, mix them up and put the mixture into the bowl. It will improve overnight.

  12. I am quite sure we agree, PeeDee.
    Your example is exactly how I look at it.
    The only difference is, perhaps, that you are more confident that ‘adopt’ is right than I would be.
    The third line @17 makes that clear.

    I hope Dutch sees the point too.
    He and I had a discussion on this before, so I know (and see) where he’s coming from.

  13. Thanks Monk and PeeDee

    Started off by getting IN THIS DAY AND AGE as the first one in and thought that I’d be in for an easier solve than normal for this setter. That certainly was not the case, taking multiple sessions over a couple of days to get it out!

    Didn’t see the nina – and congratulations to Monk for getting his 100th puzzle published here – enjoy them and hope that there is at least a 100 more to come.

    Lots of really clever tricks used throughout with SYLVAN being the hardest for me to see and once done, my favourite. It was my second to last in, followed by the deceptively hard, but in retrospect quite straightforward FASTEN, as the last one in.

  14. Only just found out that this has been published! Many thanks to PeeDee for yet another wonderful blog and to all for not only comments but good wishes. It behoves me to address the conversation raised by Dutch re the cryptic grammar at both 4dn and 16dn.

    4 TOTALITARIANISM Ordered militants to adopt song in advocacy of tyranny (15)
    My notes have this as aria in [militants (+) to]*, thereby utilising an implicit conjunction that admits a 3rd-person jumbling of the combined anagram fodder. I queried this device when solving the Times years ago and was persuaded by the editor that it was OK even if the linking conjunction is implicit (it certainly is when explicit: “A mixes” but “A and B mix”).

    16 HIROHITO Almost let US state host Tokyo’s first emperor (8)
    Analogous argument in T in [hir{e} (+) Ohio], now using an implicitly invited 3rd-person indication for containment etc.

    TBH, I still have more pressing concerns about the frequently used Wordplay *in* Definition/Answer which, though still seemingly unfair IMHO, now occasionally appears in my clues simply through the weight of accepted convention. I can’t help but see it as the answer being “in” the components, and never vice versa. But what do I know?

    Anyway, I’m simply writing to say that the clues were deliberately of the published form, for the reasons given — I’d never lay claim to laying down a standard, formulaic approach 😉

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