Financial Times 15,306 by Cincinnus

Prize puzzle from the Weekend FT of July 30, 2016

Maybe Cincinnus will be appearing here more often again; I hope so.  My clue of the week in this puzzle is 19a (OVERSPENT) and I also especially like 8d (NOTEPAD).

Across
1 EMPIRE OF THE SUN Prometheus – and fine cast in film (6,2,3,3)
Anagram (cast) of PROMETHEUS FINE
10 GOYAS Spanish paintings possibly brought back by George Orwell initially (5)
G[eorge] O[rwell] + SAY (possibly) backwards
11 INSOLVENT Very little admitted by audacious bankrupt (9)
V (very little) in INSOLENT (audacious)
12 THEREAT That clothing before or after that (7)
ERE (before) in THAT (that)
13 STOOD UP Rose made to wait in vain (5,2)
Double definition
14 SATIN South African leaders can provide material (5)
S[outh] A[frican] + TIN (can)
16 NURSEMAID Tender marshal is unarmed (9)
Anagram (marshal) of IS UNARMED
19 OVERSPENT Doctor proves hospital department was extravagant (9)
Anagram (doctor) of PROVES + ENT (hospital department)
20 NIMES House martin finally going round French city (5)
SEMI (house) + [marti]N backwards
22 TOPMAST Brown keeps high post for tall ship’s constituent (7)
PM (high post) in TOAST (brown)
25 EMENDED Corrected crossword setter turned over (7)
ME (crossword setter) backwards (turned) + ENDED (over)
27 FISHGUARD Perhaps sole protector for Welsh town (9)
FISH (perhaps sole) + GUARD (protector)
28 RILKE Poet put out about weekend (5)
K (weekend) in RILE (put out)
29 THE LAST EMPEROR Film’s false teeth – premolars? (3,4,7)
Anagram (false) of TEETH PREMOLARS
Down
2 MAY BEETLE Insect could be market leader, essentially (3,6)
MAY (could) + BE (be) + [mark]ET LE[ader]
3 ISSUE Bone to pick with sons and daughters? (5)
Double definition
4 EXISTENCE Being in river, is fish no closer? (9)
IS (is) + TENC[h] (fish no closer) together in EXE (river)
5 FUSES Song and dance about ultimate in coffee blends (5)
[coffe]E in FUSS (song and dance)
6 HALLOWEEN Greeting Little Nell primarily in annual celebration (9)
HALLO (greeting) + WEE (little) + N[ell]
7 STEED Children holding tail of draught horse (5)
[draugh]T in SEED (children)
8 NOTEPAD Writer’s block – and poet is worried (7)
Anagram (is worried) of AND POET…with a nice cryptic definition
9 AGATES Marbles provided by a wealthy American philanthropist (6)
A (a) + GATES (wealthy American philanthropist, i.e. Bill)
15 NOSTALGIA Looking back, vagrant lost again (9)
Anagram (vagrant) of LOST AGAIN
17 ROTTERDAM Scoundrel heading for distant American port (9)
ROTTER (scoundrel) + D[istant] + AM (American)
18 ARMADILLO Nothing by a stream to shelter wild animal (9)
MAD (wild) in A RILL (a stream) + O (nothing)
19 OUT OF IT Not knowing what is happening about old clothes (3,2,2)
O (old) in OUTFIT (clothes)
21 SADDER More blue snakes bottom up (6)
ADDERS (snakes) with the ‘S’ (bottom) moved up to the start (UP)
23 POSSE Endless drink for law enforcement group (5)
POSSE[t] (endless drink)
24 TRACT Short treatise followed in recital (5)
Homophone (“tracked”)
26 EYRIE First of youngsters in country, raised in nest (5)
Y[oungsters] in EIRE (country) backwards

10 comments on “Financial Times 15,306 by Cincinnus”

  1. Thanks Pete Maclean and Cincinnus.

    Good puzzle but required 2 sittings and still had to see parsing here for TOPMAST and MAY BEETLE. (Btw, ‘be’ is missing in your explanation of 2d)

  2. Thanks Pete and Cincinnus.

    Enjoyable solve although I still don’t get the second part of the definition to 19dn – about old clothes?

    1ac was also of course a book by J G Ballard – now commemorated in his home town of Shepperton by a retirement home (c’est la vie).

    I remember RILKE only from a previous puzzle.

    By the way, your intro has OVERSPEND for 19ac rather than OVERSPENT.

  3. Hamish I think that you will find that the latter part of 19d is “outfit” (clothes) about “O” (old) giving outofit

    Found this my best effort yet; did on the second run through.

  4. I don’t get the second part of 2D: “[mark]ET LE[ader]” ; what make four letters out of the twelve the “essence” of those two words?

  5. I made several little mistakes in the blog. Sorry and thanks for pointing them out. I have corrected them now.

    I wondered too about the second part of 2D. I cannot remember seeing such vague cluing from Cincinnus before and was surprised by this example.

  6. Thanks Cincinnus and Pete

    Interesting puzzle that took a few shortish sittings to get completed.  A good variety of devices were used throughout and particularly liked the misdirection that he was able to conjure up with the adjectives in the wordplay.

    Missed with the parsing of MAY BEETLE, but quite clever when it was explained.  Had not heard of the Welsh town of FISHGUARD before and the clever wordplay was quite clear that is what it was.

    Those two were my last couple to go in.

  7. Almost a year and a half has passed since this puzzle, which happens to be the last Cincinnus we have had in this space, was published.  As far as I know, Michael Curl is still setting puzzles elsewhere but he seems to have completely disappeared from the FT.  I miss him.

  8. Hi Pete

    Yep …. have about another 30 puzzles that I had downloaded from this time that I didn’t get to when I was moving house and doing some other stuff in mid 2016.  I am slowly working through them, but only get to them when I have finished all of the current ones – typically doing about 1 a week … so should have caught up by mid year 🙂
    I also enjoy the puzzles of Michael Curl – he apparently set a puzzle as Orlando in the Guardian at about the same time as this one which had a theme of ‘goodbye’ and notice that he had commented on the blog of that puzzle that it was not a swan song.  He has since only set a few Quiptic puzzles and one other normal cryptic in November last year for the Guardian, so he has obviously slowed down a lot – more is the pity.  Looking at his bio he is over 70 now so maybe he is ‘working to retirement’.

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