Independent 11,064 by Alchemi

I am afraid this is a very short blog for a fun puzzle.

Apologies for the late post – too long a story to explain!

 picture of the completed grid

ACROSS
1. Fairly inflexible suits sent back by swimmer (8)
STIFFISH

FITS (suits) returned or ‘sent back’ FISH b(swimmer)

5. Defeat extremists in erroneous 20 (6)
ROUTES

ROUT (defeat) and ES (first and last letters or ‘extremists’ in erroneous

9. Delight in meadows with neat fencing (8)
PLEASURE

LEAS(meadows) in PURE (neat)

10. Experienced hand for one turning into red dwarf? (6)
STAGER

EG (for one) inside and reversed or ‘turning’ into STAR (red dwarf?)

12. 4 released rattlesnake skin (5)
OUTRE

OUT (released) and RE (first and last letters or ‘skin’ of rattlesnake)

13. New stunted generation of NZ flora (5,4)
NGAIO TREE

An anagram (‘new’) of GENERATIOn (missing last letter or ‘stunted’

14. Busy bee, essentially following Law 4 (6)
ACTIVE

E the middle letter of bee or ‘essentially’ following ACT (law) IV (four)

16. Keeping rat goes badly (7)
STORAGE

An anagram (‘badly’) of RAT GOES

19. Having recovered from illness, that’s 4! (4,3)
WELL NOW

Double definition

21. Johns possibly arranged singly (6)
GLYNIS

An anagram (‘arranged’) of SINGLY – referring to Glynis Johns

23. Tale with twist near the end does possibly describe warship (9)
DESTROYER

STORY with the R and O changing places or ‘a twist near the end’ inside DEER (does possibly)

25. Reserve normal in the south-east (5)
SPARE

PAR (normal) inside SE (south-east)

26. Release the French promote (3,3)
LET OUT

A play on the fact that a French promotion could possibly described as LE TOUT

27. Preparing to study one in Scots government (8)
READYING

READ (to study) YIN (one in Scots) G (Government)

28. Maybe Harry’s adopted 20? (6)
STYLES

Double definition

29. Providing flexible gas loans (2,4,2)
AS LONG AS

An anagram (‘flexible’) GAS LOANS

DOWN
1. Drink dispenser wrong to put hot soup in (6)
SIPHON

SIN (wrong) around or ‘putting in’ PHO (soup)

2. The same citadel in trouble (9)
IDENTICAL

An anagram (‘trouble’) of CITADEL IN

3. Film director one of Britain’s old 20 (5)
FOSSE

Double definition

4/20. Criminal Wagner remains out of prison (11)
STRANGEWAYS

STAYS (remains) outside an anagram (criminal’) WAGNER

6. 40 naked prostitutes, which is anything but 4 (9)
ORTHODOXY

fORTy (missing first and last letters or ‘naked’) HO and DOXY (prostitutes)

7. Row about German cat (5)
TIGER

TIER (row) about G (German)

8. Doctor 4, maybe very Catholic before start of Reformation (8)
SORCERER

So (very) RC (Catholic) ERE (before) R (first letter or ‘start’ of Reformation)

11. 4 20 goes off course (4)
YAWS

An anagram (‘strange’) of WAYS

15. Wheel lining beer tun in development (5,4)
INNER TUBE

An anagram (‘development’) of BEER TUN IN

17. Arousing orphan heard having sex (9)
ANIMATING

Sounds like ‘heard’ of ANNIE (as in Orphan Annie the musical) MATING (having sex)

18. Violins initially tuned well for loud little spins (8)
TWIDDLES

fIDDLES (violins) with the F (loud) changed to the initial letters of Tuned Well

20. See 4
21. Doctor 4’s stones (7)
GARNETS

An anagram (‘doctor’) of 4

22. Considers 20, say (6)
WEIGHS

Sounds like or ‘say’ WAYS (20d)

24. Type of sauce possibly covering toasted asparagus starters (5)
SATAY

SAY (possibly) around or ‘covering’ the starters to Toasted Asparagus

25. Boring dweeb 4 when turned over (5)
SADDO

A reversal or ‘turned over’ of ODD (strange) AS (when)

 

14 comments on “Independent 11,064 by Alchemi”

  1. A clever puzzle built round 4d/20d which I found quite challenging but very enjoyable.

    I had never heard of the soup in 1d nor the second of the two words needed for prostitute needed for 6d, but both couldn’t have been anything else.

    With plenty to choose from, READYING, AS LONG AS, ORTHODOXY and ANIMATING were my top picks.

    Many thanks to Alchemi and to B&J.

  2. A fun puzzle with nice usages of 4 & 20. In 8d, ‘4’ should be underlined as part of the definition, as played by the wonderfully named Benedict Cumberbatch in the films.

  3. A couple of lol moments with the surfaces for ANIMATED and ORTHODOXY as well as the construction of the latter. Very witty. SADDO, I didn’t get as neither that nor ‘dweeb’ are part of my vocab though I recognise both. 13a – of course … NGAIO TREE … obvious really 😉 And, yes, very nice use of STRANGE WAYS throughout.

    I appreciate the blog had to be curtailed, B&J, and hope all is well. It does, though, possibly need expansion in the parsing of 8d. I didn’t know this till Googling but Doctor Strange is a character played by Benedict Cumberbatch in the eponymous movie; he becomes a SORCERER and that explains the otherwise unacknowledged 4 in the clue.

    I felt 23a took the slightest of liberties: Tale with twist near the end meaning swap two letters in STORY, one of which is the middle letter but ’tis but the tiniest, tiniest of quiblets in a super puzzle.

    Thanks Alchemi and B&J

  4. Thanks for all the comments and amendments which we greatly appreciated. The stress levels of compiling a blog at speed have now reduced but we will be without internet now for the rest of the day. If there are any further errors, we will make the changes when we are back on-line.

    We have had time to make the alterations that Hovis and Postmark have suggested.

  5. Rabbitdave@ Ph? is Ph?ietnamese noodle soup, traditionaly beef, where the meat is thinly sliced and cooked in the broth at serving.

  6. Thanks all. PostMark @ 3: I take your point, but they’re also the penultimate and antepenultimate letters, which makes them “near the end” in my book. Not that I’ve actually written a book, but you know what I mean.

  7. Thanks for popping in Alchemi @9 and it really wasn’t a beef. More something that raised a smile. If it had been a three letter word, the front’s near the end too 😀 ! You’d better make sure your book has more than three pages …

  8. Well, I had heard of both Glynis Johns and Harry Styles, although I am more familiar with the former. Not only was she the mother in Mary Poppins, she was the original singer of Send in the Clowns in Sondheim’s A Little Night Music. I also remember her short-lived sitcom on American TV in the early sixties.

  9. I cannot believe that here I am, at a quarter past midnight on a Wednesday, posting the fact that I, too, happen to be aware of both Glynis Johns and Harry Styles. Though, afore today’s blog, I couldn’t have located either. I am still not much the wiser about Harry Styles but believe he has hair and sings in a boy band. He’s probably also very rich which comes from having hair and being in a boy band. I have no hair and am not in a boy band.

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