Financial Times 17,534 by AARDVARK

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Aardvark is today's setter in the FT.

As is the norm with Aardvark, this was a pangram, but I found this one chewier than normal.

After my first pass, I only had a handful of answers in place, and most of them were in the NE corner. I eventually worked my way through them and was left with LIVENER and HIBERNIA, as well as an unparsed ALOE VERA, but I think I got there in the end.

Thanks Aardvark

ACROSS
1 EXEMPT
Free water in Devon: a thousand pints (6)

(River) EXE ("water in Devon") + M (a million) Pt. (pints)

4 BINNACLE
Anger about new cooler, revolutionary housing (8)

BILE ("anger") about N (new) + <=(CAN ("cooler" as in prison), revolutionary)

A binnacle is a housing for a ship's compass.

9 REEBOK
Antelope’s smell stifles another (6)

REEK ("smell") stifles BO (body odour, so "another" smell)

10 FLAWLESS
Female criminal unblemished (8)

F (female) + LAWLESS ("criminal")

12 ATHL;ETIC
Robust shelves occasionally put in loft (8)

(s)H(e)L(v)E(s) [occasionally] put in ATTIC ("loft")

13 JEKYLL
Legendary doctor fitful, not right with students (6)

JE(r)KY ("fitful", not R (right)) with L + L (learners, so "students")

15 HYDE
13’s other half somewhere in Manchester area (4)

Double definition, the first being the alter ego of Dr Jekyll ("13's other half").

16 LEDERHOSEN
Helen with sore head latterly ordered shorts in bierkeller? (10)

*(helen sore d) [anag:ordered] where D is (hea)D [latterly]

19 BEWILDERED
Social worker consumes nuts and wine, in a daze (10)

BEE ("social worker") consumes WILD ("nuts") and RED ("wine")

20 MEZE
Assorted dishes Naomi served, pizza slices penultimately (4)

(nao)M(i) (serv)E(d) (piz)Z(a) (slice)E(s) [penultimately]

23 RAPPED
Knocked on vacation, phone died — put on charge (6)

P(hon)E [on vacation] + D (died), put on RAP ("charge")

25 HIBERNIA
Former steakhouse in Ischia divided islanders here (8)

BERNI (inn) ("former steakhouse" chain) in (isc)HIA [divided]

27 QUENELLE
Northumbrian tucks into mostly crushed dumpling (8)

NE (North East, so in England at least, "Northumbrian") tucks into [mostly] QUELLE(d) ("crushed")

28 CAMERA
One takes pics privately when in this (6)

Double definition

29 EYE CANDY
Broadcast of Eisenhower, Warhol, Marilyn Monroe perhaps (3,5)

Homophone of IKE ("Eisenhower"'s nickname) + ANDY (Warhol)

30 HECKLE
Interrupt speech by George Cole (second half) (6)

HECK ("By George!") + [second half] of (co)LE

DOWN
1 EARBASH
Nag with ‘Attention, flyers! Belt up!’ (7)

EAR ("attention") + BA (British Airways, so "flyers") + SH ("belt up!")

2 EYESHADOW
Cosmetic beginning to enliven the old dog (9)

[beginning to] E(nliven) + YE ("the old") + SHADOW ("dog")

3 PLOVER
Wader quietly joins duck on river (6)

P (piano in music, so "quietly") joins LOVE ("duck", a term of endearment) on R (river)

5 IDLE
Unimportant papers on banks of Loire (4)

ID (identity "papers") on [banks of] L(oir)E

6 NEW DELHI
Quarter daughter probes while relocating somewhere in Asia (3,5)

NE (north east, so "quarter") + D (daughter) probes *(while) [anag:relocating]

7 CHEWY
Cold chop Yankee finds difficult to eat? (5)

C (cold) + HEW ("cut") + Y (Yankee, in the NATO phonetic alphabet)

8 EPSILON
Character in Delos recording sculpture of lions (7)

EP (extended play record, so "recording") + *(lions) [anag:sculpture of]

11 LIVENER
Boozy drink this writer has, over night- time void, in both hands (7)

I've ("this writer has") over N(ighttim)E [void] in L + R (left and right, so "both hands")

14 GENESIS
Book old rock band (7)

Double definition, the second referring to the band that included Phil Collins, Mike Rutherford and Peter Gabriel at various times in its existence.

17 STEINBECK
Writer of Pot Black theme music (honky-tonk) shown at end? (9)

STEIN ("pot") + B (black) + (them)E (musi)C (honkyton)K [shown at end]

18 ALOE VERA
Plant over in bar nicked by heavy drinkers (4,4)

O (over, in cricket) in LEVER ("bar") nicked by AA (Alcoholics Anonymous, so "heavy drinkers")

I'd have preferred former drinkers, as AA members are trying to kick the habit.

19 BAROQUE
Flashy aristocrat contracted that in Paris (7)

BARO(n) ("aristocrat", contracted) + QUE ("that" in French, so "in Paris")

21 EMANATE
Printing unit worried about article for issue (7)

EM ("printing unit") + ATE ("worried") about AN ("article")

22 MENACE
Troublemaker in jailhouse can empower insurgent (6)

Hidden backwards in [in…insurgent] "jailhousE CAN EMpower"

24 PIECE
Maybe bishop’s spiritual objective when preaching? (5)

Homophone [when preaching] of PEACE ("spiritual objective" of a bishop, possibly)

26 PLOD
PC left inside school (4)

L (left) inside POD ("school")

For non-Brits, PC (police constable) and Plod (often PC Plod) are synonymous with policeman.

9 comments on “Financial Times 17,534 by AARDVARK”

  1. KVa

    Thanks, Aardvark and loonapick!
    Lovely puzzle and a great blog (quite clear as always)!

    Liked BINNACLE, CAMERA and ALOE VERA (agree with loonapick’s comment in the blog).
    CAMERA
    Found the ‘in camera’ (privately) wordplay particularly good.

  2. FrankieG

    8d EPSILON – “Delos” meant to misdirect us to the fictional amusement park in Westworld(1973) – the science fiction Western celebrating its golden anniversary.

  3. SM

    Thanks to Aardvark and Loonapick too! Great puzzle and blog.
    I was delighted to finish this but I was stuck for ages until the fog cleared. LOI was LIVENER, not a word I am familiar with. Pity

  4. FrankieG

    25a HIBERNIA – Being !rish I needed to lift-and-separate the “divided islanders” here.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berni_Inn
    Once ‘the largest food chain outside the USA … most frequently ordered meal … prawn cocktail, steak and Black Forest gateau.’
    Wondered how long ago the “Former steakhouse” chain ceased to be – 1955-1995 until subsumed into the Beefeater chain. 28 years.

  5. FrankieG

    loi GENESIS – I never liked them much after Peter Gabriel left (in 1975 – 48 years ago).

  6. Diane

    Great puzzle; liked BAROQUE, the reminder of the old steakhouse, EARBASH and the E in each corner which helped snag HECKLE.
    Much more fun besides.
    Thanks to Aardvark and Loonapick.

  7. Peter

    Thanks Loonapick. A minor slip in 1A: “M” used to be a “thousand” as intended in the clue, not the “million” as it is today, in your solution.

  8. Martyn

    Thanks Loonapick

    Too difficult for me to finish – I got about half out in an hour, including three answers I had guessed correctly but were unparsed. I then ran out of the time and the heart to continue.

    Some nice clues, but there were too many obscure references for my liking and I felt the enjoyment did not justify the work. I admire those that got to the end.

    Thanks Loonapick and Aardvark

  9. Tony Santucci

    Thanks Aardvark. I found this challenging but I expected that from this setter. I used the guess-then-check method to get EARBASH and BINNACLE, both new to me, and I had no hope of parsing PLOD or HIBERNIA. Nonetheless I found this ultimately satisfying due to excellent clues like REEBOK, JEKYLL, EYESHADOW, PLOVER, EPSILON, and GENESIS. Thanks loonapick for the blog.

Comments are closed.