Italicus to get us going this week
One or two to make you think – thanks Italicus

ACROSS
1. Fruit from Thailand stored in abandoned canneries (10)
NECTARINES
T(hailand) inserted in an abandoned CANNERIES*
 
 
6. Book initially ignored irrefutable data (4)
ACTS
initially ignored (f)ACTS
 
 
9. Creature caught in meadow hiding in grass (7)
POLECAT
C(aught) in LEA for meadow all in POT – grass
 
 
10. Tennyson was oddly detached about capture (7)
ENSNARE
Alternate letters of tEnNySoN wAs & RE – about
 
 
12. Very suggestive article rejected, being motivated by revenge (10)
VINDICTIVE
V(ery) & A removed form INDIC(a)TIVE
 
 
13. Measure of a parliamentarian (3)
AMP
 
15. Knight, say, finally quitting day job (6)
ERRAND
The knight could be ERRANT with the last letter replaced by D(ay)
 
 
16. They question Americans in East End about Charlie (8)
SCEPTICS
Rhyming slang time, SEPTICS – septic tanks – yanks with C(harlie) inserted
 
 
18. Sensitive part of record buried by clergyman (8)
RECEPTOR
 
20. Elvis struggling to hold note is pitiful sound (6)
SNIVEL
N(ote) inside a struggling ELVIS*
 
 
23. One might be discharged from German country club? (3)
GUN
Took a moment to see this. G(erman) & UN – the UN could be a club for countries
 
 
24. Poem seen as arcane incantation (4,6)
OPEN SESAME
An arcane [POEM SEEN AS]*
 
 
26. National bird perching on city light (7)
LANTERN
LA – city & N(ational) & TERN
 
 
27. John can essentially forgive criminal behaviour (7)
LOOTING
LOO – john, toilet & TIN- can & middle of forGive
 
 
28. Crush flipping miserable husband (4)
DASH
 
29. Harlots exposed by English king’s heralds (10)
TRUMPETERS
Without the covers sTRUMPETs & E(nglish) & R(ex) & ‘S
 
 
 
DOWN
1. Some fasten a pendant here (4)
NAPE
All in one hidden answer in fasteN A PEndant
 
 
2. Underground worker runs after dog (7)
COLLIER
 
3. Blundering on, prince acted foolishly (8-5)
ACCIDENT-PRONE
[ON PRINCE ACTED]* foolishly
 
 
4. Complete reversal of Northern Ireland diplomacy (6)
INTACT
N.I. reversed then TACT – diplomacy
 
 
5. Microscopic part of outspoken newspaper article (8)
EYEPIECE
Sounds like the I newspaper & PIECE an article say
 
 
7. Secretary interrupts confab over source of imported food (7)
CHAPATI
P.A. inside CHAT & start of I(mported)
 
 
8. Ship heels precariously on axis in awkward fashion (10)
SHEEPISHLY
A precarious [SHIP HEELS]* & the Y axis
 
 
11. Two ways around forest, one way across stream (8-5)
STEPPING-STONE
EPPING forest inside 2 * ST(reet) & ONE
 
 
14. Dishevelled teacher teased outside entrance to library (10)
BEDRAGGLED
B’ED Bachelor of Education – teacher & L(ibrary) inside RAGGED – teased
 
 
17. Leader regularly concealed rancour, supporting reinstated minister (8)
GOVERNOR
I don’t know when this was written but GOVE is back in the cabinet (well he was last I heard, it might have changed again by the time you read this) & alternate letters of RaNcOuR
 
 
19. Sticks with popular filling for teeth (7)
CANINES
IN – popular inside CANES – sticks
 
 
21. Priam transformed into vile, heartless monster (7)
VAMPIRE
A transformed PRIAM* inside a heartless V(il)E
 
 
22. A run-down area welcoming closure of donkey sanctuary (6)
ASYLUM
A & SLUM with end of donkeY inserted
 
 
25. Gets old leaders to acknowledge ghastly economic situation (4)
AGES
Initial letters of Acknowledge Ghastly Economic Situation
 
 
 
 
		 
				
Beautiful surfaces. Thanks Italicus
More than one or two to make me thing, flashling! SCEPTICS beat me insofar as I had no hope of parsing – nho the Cockney slang phrase – and I struggled to get RECEPTOR, BEDRAGGLED and GOVERNOR with the last being a bung and hope. Nicely testing for a Monday and I have big ticks for POLECAT, VINDICTIVE, ERRAND, SNIVEL, LANTERN, TRUMPETERS, ACCIDENT-PRONE and STEPPING STONES.
Thanks Italicus and flashling.
In the case of GOVE shouldn’t that be ‘regularly reinstated minister’?
Lovely surfaces. Lots to make me smile. Thanks both
Really enjoyed this though held up initially by confidently writing in RUTH at 6A (which seems equally valid).
Thanks to Italicus and Flashling
Thanks both. I solved this very much in small instalments. At least today’s education in Cockney rhyming slang for a northerner was guessable in SCEPTICS whereas yesterday’s ‘titfer tat – hat’ was a London Bridge too far
@reddevil I’m quite glad I had a down solution that stopped Ruth before I looked at it. A bit of a mistake to be honest there that really ought to have been caught.
I’m another who confidently put in (t)RUTH at 6 across before reverting to ACTS later on.
Hi all, first a big thanks to MH for a late edit to 17 down, changing ‘former’ to ‘reinstated’ minister, after last weeks reshuffle.
Apologies for the RUTH/ACTS debacle, but as a setter you have the solution in front of you and are cluing that particular word, and when you find a clue that works you don’t really think about whether it might work for another word. I guess I could make a post hoc defense, by saying data is plural, so it would have to be TRUTHS rather than TRUTH, but I must admit that both answers fit equally well.
Anyway, many thanks to flashling for the blog and to everyone else for the kind comments. Always nice to read that I have raised a few smiles.
We enjoyed this immensely thank you, Italicus. Especially the microscopic part, so misleading….. As many others! Didn’t parse sceptics, so many thanks for the blog, flashling
I’ve heard of the SEPTICS, but in more common use is SHERMANS, for obvious reasons. I had no problem with yesterday’s TITFER either, though I suppose as an obsessive solver I do take an exceptional interest in the various slang forms.
Interesting on the RUTH/ ACTS dilemma. I suppose ACTS is slightly better, but they do both parse.