Independent 10,423 by Radian

Amazingly it’s almost two years since we last blogged a Radian puzzle, so we really looked forward to an interesting challenge today.

There certainly were some challenging clues, but also some straightforward ones to get us started.

As it is a Radian puzzle  (and it’s Tuesday) we started looking for a theme as we worked our way through the puzzle.

At first we thought that the theme was ‘spies and spying’ in general, but looking at the completed grid in more detail, we realised that, as well as several entries connected with spying – 5a, 8d, 10a/2d, 9d, 14a and 28a, several other entries feature in the titles of John le Carré’s espionage novels – ‘Tinker, TAILOR, Soldier, SPY’, ‘Smiley’s PEOPLE’, ‘The Secret PILGRIM’, ‘The RUSSIA House’, ‘The SPY Who Came In From The COLD’, ‘The Looking Glass WAR’, ‘The Little DRUMMER GIRL’, ‘A Perfect SPY’, ‘The TAILOR of Panama’, and ‘Our Kind of TRAITOR’.

As we have come to expect from Radian, this was an amazing grid-fill and a puzzle that was fun to solve.

image of grid

ACROSS
1 Room 101’s about coverage of Poles (7)
ICECAPS

SPACE (room) CI (101 in Roman numerals) all reversed or ‘about’

5 Les abandons hopelessly bad security device (7)
SPYHOLE

An anagram of HOPElesSLY without or ‘abandoning’ les – anagrind is ‘bad’

10 Press group returning from Pakistan or India (4)
IRON

Hidden (a ‘group from’) and reversed (‘returning’) in PakistaN OR India

11 City drugs impress northern people with their properties (10)
LANDOWNERS

LA (city) DOWNERS (drugs) round or ‘impressing’ N (northern)

12 Shadow old Republican worker in Savile Row (6)
TAILOR

TAIL (shadow) O (old) R (Republican)

13 Catholic Celtic played boring European clubs (8)
ECLECTIC

An anagram of CELTIC (anagrind is ‘played’) in or ‘boring’ E (European) C (clubs)

14 Modern husbandmen replacing area with old grasses (9)
INFORMERS

IN (modern) FaRMERS (husbandmen) with the ‘a’ (area) replaced by O (old)

16 Called English sweep (5)
RANGE

RANG (called) E (English)

17 Fan left deliveries at Old Trafford (5)
LOVER

L (left) OVER (deliveries at Old Trafford, in a cricket match)

19 A soldier at Waterloo, say, heading off trouble (9)
AGITATION

A GI (soldier) sTATION (Waterloo, say – railway station) without the first letter or ‘heading off’

23 Magical quality beginning to inspire Democrat (American) (8)
STARDUST

START (beginning) round or ‘inspiring’ D (Democrat) US (American)

24 Trap cluster of French submarines in retreat (6)
AMBUSH

Hidden (‘a cluster of’) and reversed (‘in retreat’) in FrencH SUBMArines

26 With help, Solent sorted out a similar place in Turkey (10)
HELLESPONT

An anagram of HELP SOLENT – anagrind is ‘sorted out’

27 Miss large outfit heading west (4)
GIRL

L (large) RIG (outfit) reversed or ‘heading west’

28 Two bitters, one sent back in major face-off (4,3)
COLD WAR

COLD (bitter) and RAW (bitter) reversed or ‘sent back’

29 Collins, for one, is funnier after OED’s tip (7)
DRUMMER

RUMMER (funnier) after D (last letter or ‘tip’ of OED) – a reference to Phil Collins, drummer with Genesis

DOWN
2 Former police upset reserves in cover (7)
CURTAIN

RUC (Royal Ulster Constabulary – former police) reversed or ‘upset’ + TA (Territorial Army – reserves) + IN

3 Vessel made of tin and aluminium (5)
CANAL

CAN (tin) AL (aluminium)

4 Erect border, forbidding one making the hajj? (7)
PILGRIM

LIP (border) reversed or ‘erect’ + GRIM (forbidding)

6 Race former footballer after invasive surgery (6)
PEOPLE

PELE (former footballer) round or ‘invaded by’ OP (surgery)

7 Give service in court – carpentry, perhaps (9)
HANDCRAFT

HAND (give) + RAF (service) in CT (court)

8 Fish cross river in UK, lying low (7)
LURKING

LING (fish) round or ‘crossing’ R (river) in UK

9 Pumping iron into great cast (13)
INTERROGATION

An anagram of IRON INTO GREAT – anagrind is ‘cast’

15 Disallowed remaining game, then went in front (9)
OVERRULED

OVER (remaining) RU (Rugby Union – game) LED (went in front)

18 Busy place to start monopoly? (2,3,2)
ON THE GO

Players of the board game Monopoly start at the square marked ‘go’, or ON THE GO

20 Characteristic feature or mole (7)
TRAITOR

TRAIT (characteristic feature) OR

21 Watch old boy start game in court (7)
OBSERVE

OB (old boy) SERVE (start game in court – tennis, squash, badminton, etc)

22 Leader of old kingdom leaves country (6)
RUSSIA

pRUSSIA (old kingdom) without the first letter or ‘leader’

25 Wrong clothing, say, for Muslim woman (5)
BEGUM

BUM (wrong) round or ‘clothing’ EG (say)

 

5 comments on “Independent 10,423 by Radian”

  1. Tatrasman

    Thanks B&J for explaining Cold War, I couldn’t see that at all, so a DNF for me.  Also the theme was lost on me, not being a Le Carré fan.  Despite this, I enjoyed the puzzle, so thanks too to Radian.

  2. WordPlodder

    Thanks for identifying all the Le Carré references, only some of which I could spot. All that Cold War espionage seems like part of history now, but who knows…

    Took a bit of effort to work this out. I liked HELLESPONT and the ‘people with their properties’ was a real brain teaser at the end.

    Thanks to Radian and B&J

     

  3. copmus

    Thanks B&J I went from this to Brummie without checking for theme so its nice to relax later with these themers.I am a fan opf JLC but alas no expert-thanks again and thanks Duggie.

  4. allan_c

    We finished this without much trouble and, being Tuesday and Radian, looked for a theme but failed to spot the Le Carré references.  All we could see were a couple of words that might be half (only) of names in music – IRON (Maiden) and (Ziggy) STARDUST but realised that Radian would never short-change us in that way.  But as always not seeing the theme was no bar to completing the puzzle.

    We liked INFORMERS and HELLESPONT; favourite was AGITATION for the misdirection.

    Thanks, Radian and B&J

  5. Hallow Brink

    I got ICECAPS by mistakenly thinking the end was CA (about) PS (coverage of poles), it wasn’t until I’d put that in that I saw it and realised I’d somehow still managed to get the end right.

    Didn’t see all of the theme but some great clues.

    Thanks Radian and B&J

Comments are closed.