Independent 11,237 by Kairos

Kairos fills the Tuesday slot this week.

We enjoyed this puzzle, although we had to check our last one in (6d).

Tuesday is usually theme day in the Indy. We have searched the completed grid, but cannot come up with a theme. We wondered whether 30ac might refer to 10ac George 30ac, but we can’t find any other 10acs in the grid – we’re probably missing something and barking up the wrong tree!

 picture of the completed grid

ACROSS
1. Frames made from small trees (6)
SASHES

S (small) ASHES (trees)

4. Order upon base is restored (8)
SUBPOENA

An anagram (‘is restored’) of UPON BASE

9. Suspect Mark’s in receipt of universal benefits initially (5)
DOUBT

DOT (mark) round or ‘in receipt of’ U (universal) B (first or ‘initial’ letter of benefits)

10. Policeman‘s bust sees fellow going for time (9)
DETECTIVE

DEfECTIVE (bust) with the ‘f’ (fellow) replaced by T (time)

11. Weapon some find irksome (4)
DIRK

Hidden (‘some’) in finD IRKsome

12. The essential part of fish we hear (4)
SOUL

A homophone (‘we hear’) of SOLE (fish)

13. Short story about end of Eagle? (5)
TALON

TALe (story) without the last letter or ‘short’ ON (about)

15. Mash is cooked with a bit of Imperial Japanese food (7)
SASHIMI

An anagram (‘cooked’) of MASH IS + I (first letter or ‘bit’ of Imperial)

16. Sinister politician leaves Ross in Cornwall (4)
DARK

polDARK (‘Ross in Cornwall’ – from the Winston Graham books and TV series) without ‘pol’ (politician)

19. Drawn-out desire (4)
LONG

Double definition

20. Milk deliverer meets old record producer around 4pm? (7)
TEATIME

TEAT (‘milk deliverer’) + a reversal (‘around’) of EMI (old record producer)

23. Follow promotional film without hesitation (5)
TRAIL

TRAILer (promotional film) without ‘er’ (hesitation)

24. Image of “Behold the Man” repeatedly cut in half (4)
ECHO

ECce HOmo (‘Behold the Man’ – Pontius Pilate’s description of Jesus) with both words ‘cut in half’

25. Principals in Aladdin play second house finally in recess (4)
APSE

First letters or ‘principals’ in Aladdin Play Second + E (last or ‘final’ letter in house)

27. Local heroes made rough formation (4,5)
HOME GUARD

An anagram (‘formation’) of MADE ROUGH

28. What’s carried following launch of container ship (5)
CARGO

C (first letter or ‘launch’ of container) ARGO (ship – as in Jason and the Argonauts)

29. Penalise authority (8)
SANCTION

Double definition

30. Quietly and convincingly sacking commanding officer (6)
GENTLY

coGENTLY (convincingly) without or ‘sacking’ ‘co’ (commanding officer)

DOWN
1. Vicious man randomly hides potatoes? (4,4)
SIDE DISH

SID (Sid Vicious, of the Sex Pistols) + an anagram (‘randomly’) of HIDES

2. Most traditional plaza at the top of street (8)
SQUAREST

SQUARE (plaza) ST (street)

3. Oddly satiated after turning up food (4)
EATS

A reversal (‘turning up’) of the alternate (‘odd’) letters in SaTiAtEd

5. Before a Parisian’s literary upset (5)
UNTIL

UN (French for ‘a’) + a reversal (‘upset’) of LIT (literary)

6. Storyline put in first binder? (10)
PACKTHREAD

THREAD (storyline) after PACK (put in) – a new word for us

7. Wholesome book initially replaced by my boss (6)
EDIBLE

bIBLE (book) with the first or ‘initial’ letter replaced by ED (editor – Kairos’ boss)

8. Getting on with acting a German among Germans (6)
AGEING

A (acting) + EIN (German for ‘a’) in or ‘among’ G G (two Germans)

10. Medic having week off is talking incessantly (7)
DRONING

DR (doctor – ‘medic’) OwNING (having) without the ‘w’ (week)

14. Promise to install a shower and boiler part? (5,5)
PILOT LIGHT

PLIGHT (promise) round or ‘installing’ I (one – ‘a’) LOT (shower). We were slightly hesitant that LOT and SHOWER were synonyms. Chambers does not have them as direct synonyms but has load and heap  for shower.

16. Penny once longed to be jilted (7)
DITCHED

D (‘penny once’ – pre-decimal currency) ITCHED (longed)

17. Crush Pluto finally shared with Psyche (8)
DISPIRIT

DIS (Pluto – Roman deity of the underworld) sharing the last or ‘final’ letter with SPIRIT (Psyche – Greek goddess of the soul)

18. Formal act of mercy one arranged (8)
CEREMONY

An anagram (‘arranged’) of MERCY ONE

21. Engraves piece of sweet chestnut (6)
ETCHES

Hidden (‘piece of’) in sweET CHEStnut

22. Room stores 1000 fish (6)
SALMON

SALON (room) round (‘storing’) M (1000 in Roman numerals)

24. Worry about rector having nothing for Clio’s sister (5)
ERATO

EAT (worry) round R (rector) + O (nothing)

26. Pain of a person cycling (4)
ACHE

EACH (‘a’ as in per person) with the ‘e’ moved to the back, or ‘cycling’

 

22 comments on “Independent 11,237 by Kairos”

  1. mw7000

    Definitely a theme. Not H2G2.

  2. Phi

    Darn! I missed that, and I was just wondering about rereading the books, as well!

  3. WordPlodder

    I could only recognise the bare minimum of the theme (3 answers), but looking it up later there are other references.

    Nothing to do with the theme, but I found a few difficult ones here. I had no idea of the parsing for PILOT LIGHT, PLIGHT for ‘Promise’ escaping me and I didn’t see how LOT = ‘shower’; if Chambers has load and heap, I suppose it’s OK. Didn’t parse ECHO either and PACKTHREAD, my last in, was also new to me.

    Favourite was the original ‘end of Eagle?’ for TALON.

    Thanks to Kairos and B&J

  4. Salad

    It’s more 11a your looking for B&J.

  5. Rabbit Dave

    A fun solve with a mixture of straightforward, medium difficulty and challenging clues. Only 6d was new to me. I do detest the use of 3d as a noun but that seems to be just me as most other folk don’t seem to mind it.

    Very unusually I did spot the theme.

    ECHO was my favourite.

    Many thanks to Kairos and to B&J.

  6. Bertandjoyce

    Thanks to the recent commenters. We had never heard of DIRK GENTLY the Holistic DETECTIVE. However we cannot find any other related entries. Can someone help please?

  7. mw7000

    The Long Dark Tea-Time of the Soul is the second book by Douglas Adams featuring private detective Dirk Gently, the first being Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency.

    Adams had intended to follow it with a third such novel, The Salmon of Doubt, but he died before completing it.

  8. Bertandjoyce

    Many thanks mw7000.

    We are currently out walking and only Googled the Holistic Detective Agency!

  9. Hovis

    No problem with the theme for me being a DNA fan. Thought of Dirk Gently as soon as I got DIRK which helped me get SOUL and DARK. Didn’t parse the latter (and had an unparsed ‘dire’ for a while). Needed a word fit to get the unknown PACKTHREAD. Thought the ‘having week off’ in 10d was brilliant.

  10. TFO

    Thanks both. Some assistance was needed at the end, mainly for parsing, notably for ECHO whereby all descriptions I was aware of or can find at hand refer to sound, not sight (image). Again, I’ll campaign that for DETECTIVE, police office would work better in the modern age, when TEATIME is no longer 4 o’clock, unless perhaps you are in the back yard of Number 10.

  11. Petert

    I think that’s the first time that spotting the theme actually hindered. I bunge AGENCY in for 8 down and searched in vain for holistic. Wild you Adam(s) and Eve it?

  12. Xcelomac

    I seem to remember there was an eagle with fearsome TALONs in The Long Dark Teatime …

    Thanks to all

  13. jane

    Didn’t have a clue about the theme and, like RD, I hate the use of 3d as a noun, but all was forgiven when my favourite ‘Cornishman’ turned up in 16a.
    6d was new to me and needed investigoogling but no other problems to report.

    Thanks to Kairos and to B&J for the review.

  14. Salad

    I originally had SWEW in for 16a. (Ross) KE(MP) inside S(outh)W(est). I was sure it would turn out to be a word mean ‘left’ in heraldry or vexillology. Parses perfectly just wrong, wrong, wrong.

  15. ilippu

    Thanks Bertandjoyce and Kairos.
    Good one, somewhat educational for me –
    Learnt about Ecce Homo and Poldark, but theme was beyond me.
    Didn’t parse PILOT LIGHT.
    favs: TEATIME, GENTLY, DRONING and DISPIRIT

  16. redddevil

    Theme definitely helped me with this thiough I too tried to get AGENCY into 8D for a while.
    Rabbit Dave @5 I detest the use of your 3rd word as a noun (except in its proper sense) as well as meet, invite etc but no-one seems to care much these days…

    Thanks to Kairos and to B&J.

  17. Alphalpha

    I shouldn’t try themed puzzles so I’ll take a break (going forward) (have I an option?) from Tuesday Independent offerings.

    I have no problem with the equivalence of ‘shower’ and ‘a lot’ and have heard it used in reference to everything from idiots to, well it’s generally intended as a perjorative so politicians, clergy, public servants. Not meteorites though – that’s a different ‘shower’.

  18. Alphalpha

    Oops- thanks B&J and Kairos.

  19. Salad

    Nah. Just keep doing them Alphalpha. Pain in the butt end when you know there is a ‘secret’ extra but themes regularly go over all our heads. Well, mine anyway.

  20. Dormouse

    I only spotted the theme as I was coming here. Never read the books, but I knew them vaguely. Also saw the short-lived TV series some years ago but can remember nothing about it.

  21. Kairos

    Setter here!

    My thanks to Bert and Joyce for sorting out the the fundamental interconnectedness of all things and to all who have commented.

  22. Widdersbel

    Thanks Kairos and B&J. This was a fun way to wind down at the end of the evening. Completely oblivious to the theme while solving but it became blindingly obvious as soon as I saw the word theme in the preamble to the blog.

    Alphalpha @17 – I like themes like this that don’t intrude on the solving (or should that be “the solve”?). Just pretend there isn’t a theme and don’t let it spoil your enjoyment.

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