This is my second outing as a blogger with a puzzle by Quince, one of the Indy’s newer and less prolific setters.
I have enjoyed this puzzle every bit as much as the first one I came across by this setter last month. I found it to be towards the higher end of the Indy difficulty spectrum, since there was such a lot to unpick in so many of the clues. Furthermore, this was a puzzle in two halves for me, since I had completed the right-hand side of the grid before making any real inroads into the left-hand size, where I then needed to start almost from scratch.
I think that I am relatively happy with my parsing, but I would nonetheless appreciate some confirmation (or otherwise) of my readings of 1 and 2.
My favourite clues today are almost too numerous to mention, but I would single out the following for special mention: 9, for use of “Johnny Vegas” and for making me laugh out loud; 12, 14, 22, 25 and 27, for overall concision and smoothness of surface. Incidentally, I did not know the sausage at 26, but I worked it out from the (fairly challenging) wordplay.
One should also mention the nod to Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream in the wording of the clue at 1; in the solution at 23; in the name of the compiler himself, of course; and perhaps elsewhere.
*(…) indicates an anagram; definitions are italicised; // separates definitions in multiple-definition clues
Across | ||
09 | HEATH | Johnny Vegas finally kicked out old Tory
<s>HEATH (=(rubber) johnny, i.e. condom!); “Vegas finally” means last letter, i.e. “s”, is dropped; the reference is to Edward Heath, Conservative Prime Minister from 1970-4 |
10 | TEAR DUCTS | Streaming sites rent channels
TEAR (=rent, rip) + DUCTS (=channels, conduits); cryptically, “streaming sites” are where our tears form and are channelled |
11 | OLDIE | Classic love story involves date
D (=date) in [O (=love, i.e. zero score in tennis) + LIE (=story, fib)] |
12 | APPLE TREE | Pamphleteer about to shun H&M’s core producer?
*(PA<m>P<h>LETEER); “to shun H&M” means letters “h” and “m” are dropped from anagram, indicated by “about” |
13 | TINTING | Comic character with good use of colour
Tintin (=comic character, devised by the Belgian Hergé in ‘1929) + G (=good) |
14 | TORRENT | River inspires gold rush
OR (=gold, in heraldry) in TRENT (=river, in midlands) |
16 | CHATBOT | Conversationalist wanting spirit taps at half-drained bottle
C H (=taps, in bathroom) + AT + BOT<tle> (“half-drained” means 3 of 6 letters are dropped); a chatbot is “wanting spirit” because it is not human, but rather a software application |
19 | PFENNIG | Nurse gin on the counter after parking fine makes a bit of a mark
P (=parking) + F (=fine) + EN (=nurse, i.e. Enrolled Nurse) + NIG (GIN; “on the counter” indicates reversal); a pfennig was a division of the German mark |
21 | RAINBOW | Artist wearing ribbon in array of colours
RA (=artist, i.e. Royal Academician) + IN (=wearing, as in She is in blue today) + BOW (=ribbon) |
24 | TIGHT-KNIT | Spooner’s man boob is firm
Spoonerism of “man (=knight, on chessboard) + tit (=boob)”! |
26 | NDUJA | Dieter’s also agreed to replace starter, getting spicy sausage
UND (=also, i.e. and in German, i.e. Dieter’s) + JA (=agreed, i.e. yes in German, i.e. Dieter’s); “to replace starter” here means that first letter (“u”) is replaced by second letter “n”; ‘nduja is a spreadable spicy pork sausage from Calabria |
27 | WANTED MAN | Form union to protect worker, staff suspect
[ANT (=worker) in WED (=form union, marry)] + MAN (=(to) staff) |
28 | ELATE | Please tell partner to scrub bits occasionally
<t>E<l>L <p>A<r>T<n>E<r>; “to scrub bits occasionally” means alternate letters are all dropped; to please is to elate, delight |
Down | ||
01 | THROAT | Voice expressing “Bottom, thou art translated!”
*(THO<u> ART); “bottom” means to drop last letter of word from anagram, indicated by “translated”; Chambers lists “voice” as a meaning of “throat” |
02 | WARDEN | Joint chief of staff in military bunker?
WAR- (=military) + DEN (=bunker); the reference is to Colonel John Warden III, now retired from the US Air Force |
03 | WHEELIE BIN | Refuse to be put out by this bachelor interrupting morning sleep, after such fun!
WHEE! (=such fun!) + [B (=bachelor, as in BA, BSc) in LIE-IN (=morning sleep)] |
04/18A | STRAIGHT SHOOTER | Gosh, The Traitors cast someone honest!
*(GOSH THE TRAITORS); “cast (=thrown)” is anagram indicator |
05 | CARPET | Mini dachshund, perhaps one laid on the floor
CAR (=mini) + PET (=dachshund, perhaps) |
06 | EDGE | Some enraged geese bite
Hidden (“some”) in “enragED GEese”; an edge is a bite, a keenness/pungency of taste |
07 | SCARIEST | Nap briefly interrupted by vehicle: extremely alarming!
CAR (=vehicle) in SIEST<a> (=nap; “briefly” means last letter is dropped) |
08 | ASSENTER | One sticking thumb up starts to experience regret, after ‘Like” posted
AS (=like) + SENT (=posted, mailed) + E<xperience> R<egret> (“starts to” means first letters only); if you give something the thumbs up, then you agree to it, you assent |
15 | REORIENTED | Adjusted reindeer to flying
*(REINDEER TO); “flying” is anagram indicator |
16 | CAPE TOWN | Heave, overcome by pecan nuts and port
TOW (=heave, haul) in *(PECAN); “nuts (=crazy)” is anagram indicator |
17 | AVENGING | Nude raver leaves to avoid changing for evening out
<r>AVE<r> (“nude” means outer layers, i.e. first and last letters are dropped) + <cha>NGING (“leaves (=cha, tea) to avoid” means letters “cha” are dropped); to get even is to avenge, seek revenge, hence “evening out” |
18 | SCRUTINY | Review cider making politician money
SCRUMPY (=cider); “making politician (=MP, i.e. Member of Parliament) money (=tin)” means letters “mp” are replaced by “tin” |
20 | GENOME | Someone in the garden taking ecstasy is set in a cell
E (=ecstasy, i.e. drug) in GNOME (=someone in the garden); a genome is an individual’s complete set of chromosomes, as found in a cell |
22 | BHUTAN | Sunbathe naked when out in country
*(<s>UNBATH<e>); “naked” means that outer layers, i.e. first and last letters, are dropped in anagram, indicated by “out” |
23 | WEAVER | One tends to warp “So say all of us!”
WE (=all of us) + AVER (=so say); a weaver would warp, i.e. arrange threads lengthways into a warp |
25 | TWEE | Sentimental hit at last gets number one
<hi>T (“at last” means last letter only) + WEE ((a) number one, as opposed to a number two!) |
Thanks, Quince and RR
THROAT (my reading)
‘Expressing bottom’ (removing bottom) THOU=THO.
NDUJA
I read ‘replace starter’ as relocate the starting letter.
re-place*
WARDEN
Probably, if ‘military bunker’ is read as one unit, that may sound better.
military bunker=WAR DEN.
I very much enjoyed this as I have previous Quince offerings with HEATH, WHEELIE BIN, THROAT, CARPET, AVENGING, GENOME and WEAVER being my favourites.
I know there is regular debate about GK and how much a solver should be expected to know: I do wonder how many of us will be aware of John Warden III? Given the alternative definitions available, I wonder why Quince would choose this one?
Thanks Quince and RR
2d WARDEN – “Joint” = prison “chief of staff” = prison warden
Golly, this was tough.
There were some odd surfaces and a few definitions which seemed a bit strange to me:”Core producer” (even with the ?) in 12a; “Joint chief of staff” (very obscure) in 2d; and “someone in the garden” (why not “something”?) in 20d. However overall I enjoyed the struggle.
AVENGING was my favourite.
Many thanks to Quince and to RR.
I had a tough time in the top right-hand not being familiar with Johnny for rubber or Heath and WARDEN. I can’t believe we’d be expected to know him. I see it as a sort of DD with JCS a ‘war den’ as well as a bunker. The Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) is the body of the most senior uniformed leaders. I needed the blog’s help to parse AVENGING. However, there were some very nice clues – STRAIGHT SHOOTER, TEAR DUCTS, PFENNIG, and I liked WHEELIE BIN. Thanks both.
I wish I had posted @6 one minute later as FrankieG @5 offers an explanation for 2d. However Chambers describes “the joint” = prison as American so, pedantically, it needs both the THE and an American indicator!
FrankieG @5 Sounds right. Well spotted.
WARDEN
I agree with FrankieG@5
The very phrase ‘Joint Chief of Staff’ indicates that there is an Americanism involved. Am I right in assuming so?
I gather that prisons in the UK don’t have wardens but governors. True?
In any case, FrankieG’s explanation seems plausible.
04d/18a – STRAIGHT SHOOTER – The Indy doesn’t do italics, but if this were in The FT it would be The Traitors:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Traitors_(British_TV_series)
‘The BBC stated that The Traitors was the biggest new series for young audiences across all BBC content in 2022, with a 1.3 million average audience across the series and a peak of 1.5 million for the final.’ – I wasn’t in that audience. Nice surface.
I think FrankieG has it right though ‘warden’ as head of a prison is certainly noted as an Americanism in Chambers. And, yes, we have Governors in the UK. Just to confuse things, we also have warders as prison staff. I had not appreciated that Joint Chief of Staff is a specifically US thing so had not taken it as US indicator. I like a good cryptic definition but this one was beyond me.
Never heard of NDUJA nor CHATBOT
But I enjoyed this. Thanks Quince and RR
English sailors expressing a feeling of resentment (4)
This clue employs the same trick that 1d does (THROAT)
KVa@14 – It’s A Sin by Pet Shop Boys
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dRHetRTOD1Q
FrankieG@15
Is there some link between my comment and this song?
I am not able to figure it out. Enlighten me.
Tough for me too. Defeated by the never heard of NDUJA at the end for which I couldn’t see the ‘replace starter’ = ‘re-place starter’ for UND. The parsing of the two components of the def required to make sense of WARDEN also escaped me; well done FrankieG @5 for working this out.
They both took me a while solve, but I liked the wordplay for HEATH and the def for WEAVER.
Thanks to Quince (for number ten by my count) and to RR
Wow – that was hard work and I did eventually use my phone-a-friend to get 2d, luckily he came up with the same solution as FrankieG which made perfect sense. I also struggled with the parsing of 1d – very crafty!
Ones I particularly liked were TEAR DUCTS, TINTING & TIGHT KNIT.
Thanks to Quince and to RR for the review.
KVa@16 – It’s a hint for anyone wanting to solve your clue @14 – There are seven of them – and they’re deadly.
😉
KVa@10 – PS – Well done for spotting ‘Joint Chief of Staff’ as the requisite Americanism indicator.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joint_Chiefs_of_Staff
It includes the new Space Force – the first new US military service in more than 70 years – launched by the Donald, two days after being impeached. 🙂
Thanks RatkojaRiku and Quince.
Terrific puzzle, difficult but was worth the effort.
Parsed WARDEN as prison chief, a fav.
Others that make my list are:
HEATH
PFENNIG
TIGHT KNIT
WANTED MAN
AVENGING
WEAVER
CHATBOT
A very enjoyable puzzle, thanks to Quince and RatkojaRiku. Quince of course was the original voice uttering the wonderful line!
As Chambers has joint meaning place, I took WARDEN as the chief person looking after it. My student hall of residence had a warden, and was referred to as a joint by some of the more hippie residents. Great puzzle, I thought.
Thanks Quince for a well-crafted, challenging crossword. My top picks were TINTING, PFENNIG, WANTED MAN, SCARIEST, AVENGING, and GENOME. I needed a nudge to solve SCRUTINY (scrumpy was foreign to me) and WHEELIE BIN; I couldn’t parse HEATH, not knowing “johnny”. I too saw WARDEN as the chief of a “joint” or prison. Thanks RatkojaRiku for the blog.
Had printed this out ages ago and just got round to trying it, took me three shortish evenings in bed but warden defeated me. I couldn’t parse nduja (even if I was sure it had to be right), weaver or assenter.
Found it easy at first and then slowed down, finally got tight knit and SE corner tonight, spoonerisms I always find tricky.
Thanks RR & Q 🙂