Independent 10574 / Eccles

Eccles and I seem to meet regularly on a Wednesday. I am perfectly happy with that.

 

 

 

As usual, Eccles treats us to some excellent surfaces which generate answers that make us admire the setter’s craft.  My favourites today were the clues for GAZETTEERS (24 across) and MEETING HOUSE (3 down).  Others worthy of mention are the clues for LAST MINUTE (1 across), FESTIVE (19 across), INDISCRETION (20 across) , and VIOLATE (1 down)

There were a couple of clues where we had to remove a letter from a constituent part of the wordplay and that letter occurred twice.  As I mention in the detail of the blog, it was obvious which occurrence had to be removed to generate the required entry, but there was no specific indication as to whether it was the first occurrence (the K in KICK-OFF as part of 5 down) or the second occurrence (the E in FINESSE as part of 19 down).  I wonder if some solvers feel that the location of the omitted letter should have been given?

No Clue Wordplay Entry
Across
1 Frantic preparation of stimulant drug (4-6)

Anagram of (preparation of) STIMULANT + E (ecstasy; drug)

LAST MINUT* E

LAST MINUTE (made or done with very little time to spare, usually in a frantic way)
6 Fishing bait left next to river (4)

L (left) + URE (river in North Yorkshire)

L URE

LURE (fishing bait)
9 Titillate Republican with depraved habit in China? (3-7)

TEASE (titillate) + R (Republican) + VICE (depraved habit)

TEA SE R VICE

TEA SERVICE (descriptive of a set of china cups, saucers and plates used to SERVe TEA)
10 Earth surrounded by manure forms natural fuel (4)

E (earth) contained in (surrounded by) PAT (cowPAT; manure)

P (E) AT

PEAT (a natural fuel)
12 Record individual study about Baltic, oddly (12)

BIOGRAPHY (written account or history of the life of an individual; individual study) containing (about) BLI (letters 1, 3 and 5 [oddly] of BALTIC

BI (BLI) OGRAPHY

BIBLIOGRAPHY (a list or record of books on a particular subject or by a single author, for instance)

15 By autumn, Fawkes was one? (4,3)

FALL (a term for autumn, mostly used in North America) + GUY (reference GUY Fawkes and the gunpowder plot of 1605.  Fawkes was the man discovered in the Houses of Parliament with barrels of the explosives)

FALL GUY

FALL GUY (victim or scapegoat)
16 Chance to cover masts with sails in warship (7)

FATE (chance) containing (to cover) RIG (masts and sails)

F (RIG) ATE

FRIGATE (type of warship)
17 Competitive runner from Australia mostly terrible (7)

EMU (Australian lightless bird that runs very fast) + LOUSY (terrible) excluding the final letter (mostly) Y

EMU LOUS

EMULOUS (keen to achieve or obtain the same success or excellence as someone else; competitive)

19 Celebratory number contains beat but no bass (7)

FIVE (number) containing (contains) BEST (beat) excluding (no) B (bass)

F (EST) IVE

FESTIVE (celebratory)
20 At home, consider it inappropriate to show boob (12)

IN (at home) + an anagram of (inappropriate) CONSIDER IT

IN DISCRETION*

INDISCRETION (mistake; boob)
23 Everybody’s got the back of lovely colleague (4)

ALL (everyone) + Y (last letter of [back of] LOVELY

ALL Y

ALLY (colleague)
24 They list places iconic scene from Italia’90 may be heard? (10)

GAZETTEERS (sounds like GAZZA [Paul Gascoigne, footballer] + TEARS)  Gascoigne famously cried during the 1990 World Cup (Italia’90) when he received a yellow card that would have excluded him from the final if England had reached that far.  England were knocked out in the semi-final by Germany in a penalty shoot-out

GAZETTEERS

GAZETTEERS (alphabetical lists of geographical places)
25 Comfort stop about to be dropped (4)

CEASE (stop) excluding (to be dropped) C (circa; about)

EASE

EASE (comfort)
26 Presses tropical islands to protect butterfly, perhaps (10)

KEYS (tropical islands) containing (to protect) STROKE (butterfly is a swimming stroke)

KEY (STROKE) S

KEYSTROKES (presses)
Down
1 Delayed break, losing 6-0 (4)

VIOLATE (break) excluding (losing) VI (Roman numeral for six) and  O (character that represents zero or nil)

LATE

LATE (delayed)
2 Crazy military commander leaves African island trauma (4)

MADAGASCAR (African country that is also an island) excluding (MAD [crazy] and AGA [Turkish commander or chief officer])

SCAR

SCAR (shock; trauma)
3 Enemies ought to work in place of worship (7,5)

Anagram of (to work) ENEMIES OUGHT

MEETING HOUSE*

MEETING HOUSE (house or building where people, especially Quakers, meet for public worship)

4 Month with evangelical Tory on vacation?  That’s different! (7)

NOV (November; month) + EL (letters remaining in EVANGELICAL when the central letters VANGELICA are removed [on vacation]) + TY (letters remaining in TORY when the central letters OR are removed [on vacation])

NOV EL TY

NOVELTY (anything new or different)
5 Tense before start of game, Kelvin escapes reprimand (4,3)

T (tense) + KICK-OFF (start of game) excluding (escapes) K (kelvin)   It’s obviously the first K that has to be removed to get the entry, but it is not indicated specifically.

T ICK OFF

TICK OFF (reprimand)
7 Stress free?  Chin up mate, could be very different (10)

Anagram of (could be very different) CHIN UP MATE

UNEMPHATIC*

UNEMPHATIC (without stress)
8 Basic flat under guard when roof is blown off (5-5)

SENTRY (guard) excluding (blown off) the first letter (roof) S + LEVEL (flat)

ENTRY LEVEL

ENTRY LEVEL (suitable for someone with no previous experience who is seeking to make a career in that industry; basic)

11 Amateur enthusiast coaches snooker player (12)

TRAINS (coaches) + POTTER (a snooker player, for example)

TRAINS POTTER

TRAINSPOTTER (informal term for a person who takes a detailed or obsessive interest in a subject)

13 Letter by female artist at end of guide camp (10)

EF (the letter F) + F (female) + EMIN (reference Tracey EMIN [born 1963], artist) + AT + E (last letter of [end of] GUIDE)

EF F EMIN AT E

EFFEMINATE (womanish; posturing; camp)
14 Iris filled us with extremely reasonable worries (5-2-3)

Anagram of (worries) FILLED US and RE (first and last letters of [extremely] REASONABLE)

FLEURDELIS*

FLEUR-DE-LIS (another name for an iris)
18 Superficial and loveless bad-tempered expression (7)

SOUR FACE (bad-tempered expression) excluding (less) O (character representing zero or love score in tennis)

SUR FACE

SURFACE (superficial)
19 Health tracker’s introduction welcomed by Polish, but not English (7)

T (first letter of [introduction] TRACKER) contained in (welcomed by) FINESSE (elegance, polish) excluding E (English).  Again it’s obvious which E has to be omitted to get the right answer, but there is no specific indication in the clue.

FI (T) NESS

FITNESS (health)
21 Go in search of follower of religion, we hear (4)

SEEK (sounds like SIKH [adherent of a monotheistic religion established in the 16th century by those former Hindus who rejected the authority of the Vedas, taking the Granth as their scripture])

SEEK

SEEK (go in search of)
22 Questions coronavirus protection measure, moving metre away (4)

MASKS (reference face MASKS which help to contain the spread of coronavirus) excluding (away) the M (metre)

ASKS

ASKS (questions)

13 comments on “Independent 10574 / Eccles”

  1. The consistently high standard of Eccles’ puzzles is amazing, and this one is right up there with the best of his compositions.  It was a joy to solve, and I learnt a new word in 17a.

    Being spoilt for choice, picking a favourite from his crosswords is always a tough task but today I am going to settle for 9a – what a good surface! – just ahead of 24a.

    Many thanks to Eccles and to Duncan.

  2. I can only say ‘hear hear’ to the foregoing. Excellent puzzle, no quibbles, every clue a favourite, so thanks Eccles also to Duncan for the blog.

  3. Very nice. 17 was new but very solvable. LOI 26 was my favourite as I originally misdirected myself in several directions simultaneously.

  4. Wewere mostly on Eccles’ wavelength today as we solved this without too much difficulty – SURFACE took a while to get, but then our last two, GAZETTEERS and KEYSTROKES fell into place.

    We liked BIBLIOGRAPHY, LATE, SCAR and MEETING HOUSE.

    There are some setters who take the trouble to indicate which of two occurrences of a letter to remove, but we think it may depend on how easy it is to include in the clue while maintaining a smooth surface.

    Thanks, Eccles and Duncan

  5. Agreed. Great crossword with lovely surfaces. 14d a favourite among many. Enjoyed Gazza’s tears. Thanks for the blog, too!

  6. Very enjoyable puzzle from today’s setter with a new word for me in 17a and a couple of bits of parsing that had to be sorted out post-solve.

    Thanks to Eccles and also to Duncan for the review.

  7. Wonderful addition to Eccles’(s) already great oeuvre.
    Rabbit Dave @1 sums it up perfectly well.
    Although …. I couldn’t see how GAZZATEERS worked – silly me, now a favourite.
    And 22dn was another brilliant clue, simple but brilliant.
    Perhaps, our blogger has a point with what he said about Kelvin (5dn) but it didn’t bother me.

    Eccles, precision, fine surfaces, no gimmicks or themes. All very natural, all very very good.
    Many thanks to duncanshiell for the blog, and Eccles (nuff said).

  8. Many thanks to Duncan for the blog, and to all who commented. Regarding which of two occurrences of a letter to remove, my thought aren’t that far away from what Allan_C suggests – it is nice if I can, but I don’t tend to worry if I can’t (as long as the cryptic instructions don’t say that all examples of a letter are removed). I consider that if a solver can think of the correct synonym and work out what the wordplay must be, then it is not going to be beyond them to decide which of the two possibilities for deletion are correct.

Comments are closed.