Phi is very much at home today, occupying his customary Friday slot.
I found this to be a medium-difficulty Phi puzzle, which gave me a good workout but saved me undue head-scratching. I didn’t spot any kind of (ghost) theme today, although there is doubtless one in there, “haunting” the grid. I look forward to hearing what it was that I missed.
The expression at 1A/28 was new to me, as was the adjective at 8. I needed to search Chambers to find 8, rather than arriving at it via the wordplay, since “palm” is not the first word that comes to mind when one reads “award”.
My favourite clues today were 11 and 14, both for their & lit. content.
*(…) indicates an anagram; definitions are italicised; // separates definitions in multiple-definition clues
| Across | ||
| 01/28 | WATCH NIGHT | New Year’s Eve, say, when horologists gather?
Cryptically, horologists (or watch and clock specialists) might get together for a “watch” night!; in some Protestant churches, 24 December and 31 December are watch nights |
| 04 | KINGSHIP | Position of power‘s good in family
G (=good) in KINSHIP (=family) |
| 09 | LESSON | Not so busy studying?
Someone who is not so busy has “less on”, less to do |
| 10 | ESPECIAL | Particular observation about business district
EC (=business district, in London) in ESPIAL (=observation, espying) |
| 12 | BEEHIVE | Second letter I have written about Hungary’s area of industry
H (=Hungary, in IVR) in [BEE (=second letter, of alphabet) + I’VE (=I have)] |
| 13 | ANATOMY | Thirteen characters absorbed in no matter which medical discipline
A TO M (=thirteen characters, i.e. first half of the alphabet) in ANY (=no matter which) |
| 14 | REPOSEFUL | Primarily usable for sleep, possibly?
*(U<sable> + FOR SLEEP); “primarily” means first letter only is need for the anagram, indicated by “possibly”; & lit. |
| 16 | EULER | European monarch dismissing foremost mathematician
E (=European) + <r>ULER (=monarch; “dismissing foremost” means first letter is dropped); the reference is to Swiss mathematician Leonhard Euler (1707-83) |
| 18 | STAYS | Suspends // bones
Double definition: to “stay” proceedings is to suspend them AND “stays” in corsets are bones |
| 20 | OSTRACISM | Refusal to involve East German? Discrimination
OST (=East German, i.e. the German word for east) + RACISM (=discrimination) |
| 22 | MINDSET | Is upset by SF film, having a fixed view
MINDS (=is upset, i.e. bothered by) + E.T. (=SF film) |
| 23 | OCTOBER | Happen to interrupt medic, losing day? Month
BE (=happen, occur) in <d>OCTOR (=medic; “losing day (=D)” means letter “d” is used) |
| 25 | OCEANIAN | Once at sea with a Scotsman, covering Pacific 26
*(ONCE + A) + IAN (=Scotsman); “at sea” is anagram indicator; Oceanian means “covering Pacific region (=entry at 26)” |
| 26 | REGION | Say I will invade centre of incorrect area
[E.G. (=say, for example) + I] in <w>RON<g> (=incorrect; “centre of” means first and last letter are dropped) |
| 27 | ENTR’ACTE | Area in middle of scenery depicted in theatre music
TRACT (=area) in <sc>ENE<ry> (“middle of” means central letters only are used) |
| Down | ||
| 01 | WILD BIRDS | Passed time, we hear, with offers to trap river avifauna
Homophone (“we hear”) of “whiled” (=passed time) + [R (=river) in BIDS (=offers)] |
| 02 | TASTE | Sample country, moving South
STATE (=country); “moving South (=S)” means letter “s” is moved to a later position in the word |
| 03 | HOODIES | I am satisfactory, turning up in gardens in casual wear
ODI (I + DO (=am satisfactory); “turning up” indicates vertical reversal) in HOES (=gardens, as verb) |
| 05 | INSTALLATION | Fashionable place to host each and every mixed-media work?
IN (=fashionable, trendy) + [ALL (=each and every) in STATION (=place, position)] |
| 06 | GRENADE | Work unit, including a European, picked up item of ammunition
DANE (=European) in ERG (=work unit); “picked up” indicates (here full) vertical reversal |
| 07 | HOI POLLOI | Hard work restraining one over and over amidst evil rising masses
{I (=one) in [H (=hard) + OP (=work, i.e. opus)]} + O (=over, on cricket scorecard) + {[LLOI (O (=over, on cricket scorecard) in ILL (=evil); “rising” indicates vertical reversal)]} |
| 08 | PALMY | Flourishing year following award
PALM (=award, symbol of victory) + Y (=year); palmy is flourishing, thriving, glorious, as in “the palmy days of the 1970s” |
| 11 | SELF-PORTRAIT | What has appeal, regularly, for artist at work?
*(<a>P<p>E<a>L + FOR ARTIST); “regularly” means alternate letters only are used; “at work” is anagram indicator; & lit. |
| 15 | PLAIN TEXT | Objection over additional material artist excluded. It’s readily perused
PLAINT (=objection, cf. complaint) + EXT<ra> (=additional material; “artist (=RA, i.e. Royal Academician) excluded” means letters “ra” are dropped); in computing, plain text is text that is readable and uncoded, hence “readily perused” |
| 17 | REMBRANDT | Artist having little time to add to rock-band trademark
R.E.M. (=rock-band, from USA) + BRAND (=trademark) + T (=time); the reference is to Dutch artist Rembrandt (1606-69) |
| 19 | SUSANNA | NASA Sun shot having name of Mozart opera character
*(NASA SUN); “shot” is anagram indicator; Susanna is the main female character in Mozart’s The Marriage of Figaro (1786) |
| 21 | ACTAEON | Classic victim of hunt, an age after the event
ACT (=the event) + AEON (=age); in Greek mythology, Actaeon was a hunter turned into a stag by the goddess Artemis |
| 22 | MOOSE | Run from blue deer
MO<r>OSE (=blue, i.e. depressed); “run (=R, on cricket scorecard) from” means letter “r” is dropped |
| 24 | BRING | Fetch book round
B (=book) + RING (=round, as noun) |
A good coffee-break puzzle; a little head-scratching required but no external help. 8dn was almost our last one in as we were baffled until ‘palm’ for ‘award’ occurred to us in a light-bulb moment.
Re ACTAEON – he was a hunt victim in that after being transformed into a stag he was killed by his own hounds. The story is recounted by Ovid, as summarised here.
Lots to like here. Favourites were BEEHIVE and SUSANNA – for no particular reason except they were, to use a cliché, simple but effective.
Thanks, Phi and RatkojaRiku
Flying visit from me today as just about to head out for the weekend, but wanted to say that my thoughts matched those of RR. Thanks both.
First Phi puzzle I’ve done, and very enjoyable. Knowing there was likely to be a theme, I spotted it quite early, since it’s up my street. Rembrandt painted the Anatomy Lesson of Dr Nicholaes Tulp, the Night Watch, one with Actaeon in it, various Susannas and of course, lots of self portraits.
thanks, Phi and RatkojaRiku
We have only just finished the puzzle – out walking last night on one of the Maggie’s Cultural Crawls.
We looked at the final grid and spotted Rembrandt and Self-portrait but didn’t bother to google anything to see if we were correct – it was easier to visit here!
Thanks for the final weekday workout Phi and thanks RatkojaRiku fir the blog.