“The perimeter contains the surnames of SIX AUTHORS, reading clockwise from top left and referred to as 1 to 6 in that order in the six blocks. Solvers IN SEARCH OF A CHARACTER (or pair of characters) to be written in the vacant cell in each block will find them appearing in no particular order in the six shaded cells. Each BLOCK RECIPE DIFFERS, as the unchecked perimeter letters spell out. All clues contain an extra letter, to be removed before solving and always leaving a real word; when read in clue order these will assist. Numbers in brackets give cells available; the Chambers Dictionary (2016) is recommended.”
I enjoyed the challenge of this puzzle – although whether I’d be saying that if it had stumped me, I don’t know! Some of the clues – for example, 15, 24, and 26 across – was rather tricksy. In any case, the thematic action was, I thought, neat.
The extra letters spell TITLE FROM WRITER IS WORDPLAY TO CELL CONTENT.
In order, the authors are:
R.C. SHERRIFF, whose ‘Journey’s End’ clues Y,
Joseph CONRAD, whose ‘Heart of Darkness’ clues KN,
John STEINBECK, whose ‘East of Eden’ clues N,
Charles KINGSLEY, whose ‘Westward Ho!’ clues OH,
Ian FLEMING, whose ‘Doctor No’ clues ON, and
James Fenimore COOPER, whose ‘The Last of the Mohicans’ clues S.
Note
10dn included a misprint that gave the length as 6.
Notation
(xxx) = definition
[xxx] = (anagram/homophone/container/etc.) indicator
XXX* = anagram
< = reversal
STATE = letter to be removed before solving
DUNT = character(s) in shaded cell
Please post a comment if the explanations are not clear.
| Across | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| T | 8 | SEAT | Country house in [poor] STATE* (4) |
| I | 9 | NAUSEA | Revulsion from <AN (BAN [without B (basis)]) [reflecting] USE (exercise) A (area) (6) |
| T | 11 | ELEGIAST | {STAGE LIT}* [poorly] [after] E [last piece of] ONE) poet after another (8) |
| L | 12 | DUNT | Local gild moribunD UNTil [taking some members] (4) |
| E | 14 | NELIS | Fruit that’s |
| F | 15 | OUPA | Grandfather from township UP (raised) [in] OA ([unrefined] ROAD) (4) |
| R | 16 | KNAWEL | <{WARN [in] LEK (display area)} [about] weed (5) |
| O | 17 | PET | Favourite {TP (TRIP [on vacation])? E (East)}* [coast] (3) |
| M | 18 | OPE | HOPEful [times] revealed in song (3) |
| W | 21 | OHM’S LAW | [Criminal] {WHO WAS L (left)}* [holding] M (money) for current (and potential) relationship (6, two words) |
| R | 23 | BATHOS | {BAR SHOP}* [up] – what a let-down! (6) |
| I | 24 | SAI | IS* ([Means of] usIng taSty) [baits] [to trap] A monkey (3) |
| T | 26 | GER | GREAT* [hideouts] [after taking] AT (bit of a kip) in tent (3) |
| E | 28 | SANDY | S AND Y ([Spelt out] SY ([limits of] ESPECIALLY)) elderly Scotsman (5) |
| R | 30 | CURN | [Regular letters sent out in] |
| I | 31 | NICOL | Polarising crystal IS [filed from] [crude] SILICON* (5) |
| S | 32 | DONOR | One who provides DOOR (sentry) [boxes] N [either side of] NO. TEN (4) |
| W | 33 | LABRIDAE | LAB (Researchers gather where) RIDE (badger)’s [hiding] A (American) fish family (8) |
| O | 34 | MENHIR | Standing stone M (marks) {N (national) I (independence) [together with] HERO}* [in struggle] (6) |
| R | 35 | BEAK | Bill from BAKER [after E ([last piece of] CAKE) is shifted] (4) |
| Down | |||
| D | 1 | HOLDUP | HUP (Go faster), [driven by] OLD (earlier) stoppage (6) |
| P | 2 | REGNANT | RENT (Charter) [framed] < ANG (in English), [preceding] being crowned (7) |
| L | 3 | RAIT | Steep RAIL T (TRACK [with final RACK (stretch) missing] (4) |
| A | 4 | ITALA | Translation of Bible [awarded by] hospITAL Almoner (5) |
| Y | 5 | FATNESS | Fertility of {YEAST FNS ([regularly] FUNDS)}* [brewing] (7) |
| T | 6 | CUPEL | [Unhealthy] COUPLE* O (told) [to leave] vessel for tests (5) |
| O | 7 | NEWIE | [Red] WINE* E ([left owing to] EXCESSIVE) novelty (5) |
| C | 10 | SALPA | CLASS* [drifting] P (past) [included] plankton (5) |
| E | 13 | CWMS | CMS (Unites briefly), [having W (won) mining] valleys in the Rhondda (4) |
| L | 19 | EARCON | ARCO (Bowl) in EN (space) broadcast signal from computer (6) |
| L | 20 | CHALLIE | LIE (Press) [after] CHAL (flaw) to silky fabric (7) |
| C | 21 | OHONE | Taoiseach’s cry of despair in ONCE [supporting] < [overthrow of] HO (moderation) (4) |
| O | 22 | LACONIAN | Spartan LAN ([unveiled] PLANS) [to open] CONIA (poison) (7) |
| N | 25 | ARRACK | Strong drink ARR (arrived) [for] B (bishop) [in] BACK (line at rear) (6) |
| T | 27 | EISEL | Vinegar, perhaps on the shelf [in] cruET, IS ELsewhere (5) |
| E | 28 | SOPHY | Former king [dashed] HOPES* [over] Y ([term of] REGENCY) (5) |
| N | 29 | DIBBS | Money for some people in < BIND [over] BS (bill of sale) (5) |
| T | 32 | DREG | Trace DR (debtor) [before] EG (brief stay) (4) |
As always, my thanks for the blog. I must first apologise to anyone confused by 10d, and hope that it didn’t compromise solvers’ enjoyment too much. Setters are provided with a proof for checking, wherein I’d missed the problem – the fault is entirely mine. In fact the (6) is correct – the error lies in a rogue bar that destroys the grid symmetry and cuts the S from SALPAS, the intended solution, PA rather than P being the abbreviation for PAST. I suspect I might have spotted it had not the truncation removed a pluralising S to leave a real word, although that’s no excuse.
Ifor