Financial Times 17,927 by Gozo

Puzzle from the Weekend FT of December 21, 2024

Gozo usually appears around holiday time and here he is with a puzzle that includes three Scottish islands.  Ah, but even more if you count hidden ones!  So, fitteen Scottish islands:  Coll, Arran, North/South Ronaldsay, Harris, Mull, Bass Rock, Iona, Islay, Hoy, Tiree, Stroma, Jura, Bute and two that I, a Scotsman, had never heard of Lee and Seil.   Or seventeen if we count SKIE/SKLYE and EGG/EIGG.  Or maybe nineteen if we dare to count BERMUDA.  What a feat!  Applause for Gozo, please.

My first-in was 5 (ALOFT) and last was 10 (JURANT), a new word for me.  My favourites are 12 (SUNSTROKE), 18 (HARRISON) and 25 (WARRANTED).

 picture of the completed grid

ACROSS
1 COLLAPSE
Fall down at pass. What a mistake! (8)
COL (pass) + LAPSE (what a mistake)
5 ABSEIL
Get down to rock bottom (6)
Cryptic definition.  (I was originally unsure about this and thank commenters for confirming it.)
9 RATIONAL
On trial, a criminal who’s not lost it (8)
Anagram (criminal) of ON TRIAL A
10 JURANT
Making an oath, managed project outside (6)
RAN (managed) in (outside) JUT (project)
12 SUNSTROKE
Holiday ailment affected Turk’s nose (9)
Anagram (affected) of TURKS NOSE
13 SCRUM
Huddle showing resistance in film (5)
R (resistance) in (in) SCUM (film)
14 AHOY
Call to leading airman and Olympic champion cyclist (4)
A[irman] + HOY (Olympic champion cyclist) with the latter referring to Sir Chris Hoy..
16 TRIBUTE
British university in hackneyed accolade (7)
B (British) + U (university) together in (in) TRITE (hackneyed)
19 GRADUAL
Greek F1 driver coming back by degrees (7)
GR (Greek) + LAUDA (F1 driver, Nikki) backwards (coming back)
21 BASS
Rock singer (4)
Double definition with the first referring to is an island in the Firth of Forth.
24 TIREE
Initial investigation into family line on isle (5)
I[nvestigation] in (into) TREE (family line)
25 WARRANTED
Justified fighting and shouted (9)
WAR (fighting) + RANTED (shouted)
27 MISLAY
Mass killer’s confession: ‘Forget where’ (6)
M (mass) + homophone (confession) of “I slay”
28 MULLIONS
Cornish resort’s window parts (8)
Double definition with the first referring to the resort village of Mullion in Cornwall.
29 RONALD
Hamburger mascot otherwise named Wesker or Rat? (6)
Anagram (otherwise named) of ‘ARNOLD [Wesker]’ (the British playwright) and of ‘ROLAND [Rat]’ a British television puppet character.
30 BASE CAMP
Bottom affected at start of the climb (4,4)
BASE (bottom) + CAMP (affected)
DOWN
1 CARESS
Pet shop’s opening under many worries (6)
CARES (many worries) + S[hop]
2 LATENT
Hidden overdue books (6)
LATE (overdue) + NT (books)
3 ALOFT
Float freely, on high overhead (5)
Anagram (freely) of FLOAT
4 SHADOWY
Dim and ostentatious, nowadays, inside (7)
AD (nowadays) in (inside) SHOWY (ostentatious)
6 BLUE SKIES
Having little practical relevance, like buses could be (4-5)
Anagram (could be) of LIKE BUSES
7 EVA BRAUN
Awfully brave relative has no time for WW2 photographer (3,5)
Anagram (awfully) of BRAVE + AUN[t] (relative has no time)
8 LETS MEET
Shall we get together and settle with me writhing (4,4)
Anagram (writhing) of SETTLE ME
11 SETT
Home for French joiner in street (4)
ET (French joiner!) in (in) ST (street)
15 HOUSE CALL
Doctor ‘s visit — ho ho! (5,4)
HO (house) + HO (call)
17 EGG TIMER
Get grime mixed with a drop of sand (3,5)
Anagram mixed of GET GRIME
18 HARRISON
Ford out horse-racing without GCE (8)
Anagram (out) of HORS[e] RA[c]IN[g]
20 LAWN
Garden feature with heads of lobelia and wisteria needed (4)
L[obelia] A[nd] W[isteria] N[eeded]
21 BERMUDA
Triangular shorts! (7)
Cryptic definition
22 STROMA
Island saint on European capital (6)
ST (saint) + ROMA (European capital)
23 ADDS UP
Does some mathsthat seems reasonable! (4,2)
Double definition
26 ALLEE
No good to maintain garden path (5)
ALLE[g]E (no good to maintain)

8 comments on “Financial Times 17,927 by Gozo”

  1. Cineraria

    5A: Cryptic definition
    27A: M (mass) + “I SLAY.”
    I don’t think I remembered Eva Braun as a photographer, but it is right there in her Wikipedia entry. I found this puzzle pretty difficult in places, but I think that the clues are OK–mostly a matter of words/references that were not familiar to me.

  2. Shanne

    Lots of mostly Scottish islands hidden in this – ISLAY, MULL, COLL, TIREE, JURA, HOY, STROMA, HARRIS, ARRAN, ROMA, RUM, IONA – not all Hebrides as HOY is part of Orkney. BASS is an islet, ish and BERMUDA.

    I thought ABSEIL was a cryptic-ish definition too.

  3. Pelham Barton

    Thanks Gozo and Pete
    5ac and 27ac: I agree with earlier comments
    29ac: I looked for a Ronald Wesker, but did not find one, so this appears to be a pair of linked indirect anagrams. I know that Azed has done single versions of this sort of thing at least twice, across a period of over fifty years, and of course Azed has no authority in the FT. Perhaps this is a case where doing the same thing twice in the clue actually makes it easier for the solver.

    Small point: there is (currently) superfluous underlining in the parsing of 16ac.

  4. Southern Skies Simon

    I also got a few more islands: SEIL, BUTE, LEE, and perhaps EGG (Eigg) and SKIE (Skye)… Fun crossword. Thanks Gozo and Pete!

  5. Hovis

    Not long ago we had the clue ‘Rock singer (5)’ for SIREN – A much better clue imo.

  6. Martyn

    A crossword in two parts for me. I greatly appreciated the many lovely surfaces that were witty and concise. But the bottom half needed so much GK that I wondered whether I was doing the Polymath.

    I loved RATIONAL (great surface and anagram), and also ticked TRIBUTE, WARRANTED (clever and simple observation), CARESS, HOUSE CALL.

    A few frowns, but aside from my GK harrumph I thought it was a top-class puzzle

    Thanks Gozo and Pete

  7. KVa

    MISLAY and HOUSE CALL were my faves.
    Thanks Gozo and Pete

  8. Tony Santucci

    Thanks Gozo. I missed the islands even though I know many of them and have even visited Islay. I failed with RONALD and couldn’t parse ALLEE but all else eventually fell with TRIBUTE, EVA BRAUN, and BERMUDA being my podium. Thanks Pete for the blog.

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