Guardian Genius 267 / Soup

Soup is a regular Genius setter. He sets interesting and challenging puzzles with clever twists.  Let’s see what he gives us this month.

Well, it looks like an alphabetical jigsaw, but there aren’t many blocks in the even numbered across rows or the even numbered down columns.  Are we being asked to add symmetrically-placed blocks to the grid?  In barred jigsaw crosswords we are often expected to add bars to a completely blank grid as part of the solving process.

The problem with adding blocks is that the entry lengths go from 5 to 15 letters, including two of 10 letters, two of 11 letters, one of 13 letters and one of 15 letters.  Given there are no entries of 4 letters, the six entries of 10 letters and longer will require a row or column of their own with the rest of cells being blocks.  

The grid gives us 14 rows and columns so that would leave just eight rows and columns for all the remaining 24 entries.  If we add blocks to the grid, these 24 entries would require twelve rows or columns.  It is impossible to fit three entries into any one row or column and include blocks. 

The logic therefore dictates that we take blocks out of the original grid or share cells between some of the entries.  Taking blocks out would introduce complex intersections akin to US crosswords.

I know from an experience that a blogger shouldn’t say that he or she found solving the clues very difficult or very easy, as at least one solver will disagree. For this puzzle, I will say though that I found solving the clues slightly easier than deducing the end game.

Often with a jigsaw, there are a few entries that can only go in one place.  In this case ,symmetry determines that the 15-letter entry is constrained to the central row and the 13-letter entry is constrained to the central column.  The alphabetical nature of the clues helped me get ELECTROSTATIC (13) fairly early on.  The 15-letter entry, COLLISION COURSE, took me a bit longer to solve, but again the alphabetical order of the solutions helped.

I cold-solved the majority of the clues before trying to populate the grid.  With COLLISION COURSE and ELECTROSTATIC in place, there could only be one position for each of INTAGLIO (column 2) and SONORITY (column 14).  I then played about with the 10- and 11-letter entries trying to fit BLUEBOTTLE, INFLUENCING, REDEPOSITED and RETREATING into the grid.  It was a frustrating couple of days before I noticed that INFLUENCING and INGRATE could overlap and fill a complete row as could BLUEBOTTLE and LENTILS.

From then on, the jigsaw began to fit together fairly quickly fitting 30 entries comprising a total of 230 letters into the 206 available cells (counting intersections twice).  A study of the grid below shows there are 24 cells contributing to two entries across or down.

 i noticed that the overlapping letters were symmetrically placed in the grid and thought “that’s clever” before I realised that the overall symmetric nature of the grid entries guaranteed that the overlapping cells would also be placed symmetrically.

I liked many of the clues for their surfaces, but I’ll just highlight a few –

ALPACA with its association with the camel family, 

ANGERED for the multiple indicators,

the two fish moving slowly (IDLING),

the use of Blake Lively to form an anagram of BLAKE and

the clue for SONORITY as many computers deliver sound unless you are prepared to pay for better sound cards.

I doubt if I was the only solver to groan at the clue for DEPOT (DEPOT)

The grid below shows how everything fitted together.  The detailed table conforms the alphabetic nature of answers to the clues.

Thanks to Soup for an enjoyable challenge with an endgame that took me a while to crack.  it was very satisfying though when it did fall.  I look forward to more Geniuses from Soup.

No Detail
1 Touch a tuxedo, going to take off jacket (6) 

ADJOIN (be in contact; touch)

A + DJ (dinner jacket; tuxedo) + gOINg excluding the outer letters  G and G (take off jacket)

A DJ OIN

2 After shearing, scalp a camel (or something like it) (6) 

ALPACA (domesticated animal related to the llama [South American transport animal of the camel family])

ALPACA (letters 3 to 8 of scALP A CAmel, excluding the additional letters at the beginning and end of the words [after shearing])

ALPACA

3 Enraged, furious, fuming (7) 

ANGERED (fuming, furious or fuming)

Anagram of (furious) ENRAGED

Also, the clue is a triple definition

ANGERED (enraged)

ANGERED (furious)

ANGERED (fuming)

ANGERED

4 Fly low, then abort, losing nerve (10) 

BLUEBOTTLE (large fly with a metallic blue abdomen)

BLUE (depressed; low) + BOTTLE (fail to do or achieve something as a result of losing one’s nerve)

BLUE BOTTLE

5 Nick tip of pinkie off in nasty paper cut (7) 

CAPTURE (arrest; nick)

Anagram of (nasty) pAPER CUT excluding (off) P (first letter of [tip of] Pinkie) – either P could be the one excluded

CAPTURE*

6 Air conditioning is running, one by one toppling house of cards (6) 

CASINO (an establishment for gambling, usually with roulette and card and dice games; house of cards)

AC (Air Conditioning) + IS + ON (running) with each [one by one] component part reversed (toppling) 

CA< SI< NO<

7 A smashing way to go! (9,6) 

COLLISION COURSE (a course which, if persisted in, will result in a collision)

COLLISION COURSE – the clue is a cryptic definition based on synonyms smashing (the possible result of a COLLISION) and ‘way to go’ (COURSE)

COLLISION COURSE

8 Store to remove pans? (5) 

DEPOT (store)

DE (prefix indicating a reversal of process) + POT (pans) so put together DE-POT refers to the removal of pans

DE POT

9 Continuous noise echoes from tenor drum (5) 

DRONE (monotous and continuous hum or noise)

DRONE (reversed [echoes] hidden word in [from] tENOR Drum)

DRONE<

10 Relaxed, stopped going topless (5) 

EASED (relaxed)

cEASED (stopped) excluding the first letter C (going topless)

EASED

11 Vote Democrat out: dictator’s misbehaving (still, it’s shocking!) (13) 

ELECTROSTATIC (capable of delivering an electric shock; it’s shocking)

ELECT ([cast a] vote) [for]) + an anagram of (misbehaving) dICTATOR’S excluding (out) D (Democrat) – I’m not sure what ‘still‘ is doing in the clue.  I know STATIC means ‘still‘ but STATIC is part of the anagram rather than being clued separately.

ELECT ROSTATIC*

12 Affable Ealing sort (6) 

GENIAL (affable)

Anagram of (sort) EALING

GENIAL*

13 Two fish moving slowly (6) 

IDLING (of an engine, running / moving slowly when disconnected from the transmission)

ID (a fish of the carp family) + LING (a fish of the cod family)

ID LING

14 Showing dominance in sport, welcoming luck in the first half (11) 

INFLUENCING (showing dominance to affect the outcome of an event, for instance)

IN + (FENCING [a sport] containing [welcoming] LU [first two letters of {first half of} LUck])

IN F (LU) ENCING

15 One not appreciating where there might be fire? (7) 

INGRATE (an ungrateful person; one not appreciating)

IN GRATE (in the fireplace; a place where you might find a fire)

IN GRATE

16 Isolating son withdraws, unfortunately getting no relief (8) 

INTAGLIO (a figure cut into any substance; a stone or gem in which the design is hollowed out, the opposite of cameo [figure carved in relief]; no relief)

Anagram of (unfortunately) IsOLATING excluding (withdraws) S (son)

INTAGLIO*

17 To begin jousting, I understand, just involves toy sabres (unless fighting without weapons) (3-5) 

JIU-JITSU (system of fighting without weapons)

JIU-JITSU (first letters of [to begin] each of Jousting, I, Understand, Just, Involves, Toy, Sabres and Unless)

J I U J I T S U

18 Fast is broken by a bite of leafy vegetables (7) 

LENTILS (seeds of a leguminous plant.  Legumes are classified as vegetables)

LENT (period of fasting in the Christian calendar) + IS containing (broken by) L (first letter of [bite of] Leafy)

LENT I (L) S

19 Pass up Blake Lively, having key opportunity? (8) 

LOCKABLE (capable of being closed by a key)

COL (pass in a mountain range) reversed (up; down entry) + an anagram of (lively) BLAKELOCKABLE is entered vertically in the grid, so ‘up’ is a legitimate reversal indicator.

LOC< KABLE*

20 Where one can write anything except letters 5, 16, 1 or 4 (7) 

NOTEPAD (a block of paper on which one can write)

NOT (anything except) E, P, A or D which are letters 5, 16, 1 and 4 in the alphabet

NOT E P A D

21 Re-explain not having sex to end quivering of nether regions (8) 

PERINEAL (relating to the lower part of the body between the genital organs and the anus; of nether regions)

Anagram of (quivering) RE-ExPLAIN excluding (not having) X (last letter of [to end] seX)

PERINEAL*

22 Got to race, dropping out in the middle, hurt (7) 

REACHED (got to)

RacE excluding the central letters AC (dropping out in the middle) + ACHED (hurt)

RE ACHED

23 Again settled on the outskirts of Rome – indeed, I stop moving (11) 

REDEPOSITED (out down again; again settled on)

RE (outer letters of [outskirts of] RomE) + (an anagram of [moving] I STOP contained in [in] DEED – ‘indeed’ being read as ‘in deed’)

RE DE (POSIT*) ED

24 Climbing down decaying tree with rank bark (10) 

RETREATING (withdrawing from a position of difficulty; climbing down)

Anagram of (decaying) TREE contained in (with … bark [covering of a tree trunk. so ‘covered by’]) RATING (a rank)

R (ETRE*) ATING

25 Pay artist back (6) 

REWARD (pay)

DRAWER (artist) reversed (back)

REWARD<

26 From then on, starts to really exasperate Frank (7) 

SINCERE (free from pretence; frank)

SINCE (from then on) + RE (first letters of [starts to] each of Really and Exasperate)

SINCE R E

27 Notes first sign of rays from the sun (5) 

SOLAR (from the sun)

SO (a note of the tonic solfa) + LA (another note, giving notes) + R (initial letter of [first sign of] Rays)

SO LA R

28 Very negative lines written about computers’ quality of sound (8) 

SONORITY (quality of sound)

SO (very) + NO (negative) + (RY [{railway}] lines] containing [about] IT [information technology {computers}])

SO NO R (IT) Y

29 Not over-reliable hairdresser’s effort? (7) 

TONSURE (the act or mode of clipping the hair, or of shaving the head; hairdresser’s effort)

NOT reversed (over) + SURE (safe; secure; reliable)

TON< SURE

30 Where one might go from theatre is inconvenient (8) 

UNTOWARD (inconvenient)

UNTO (to) + WARD (where patients are taken after surgery [operation])

UNTO WARD

 

1 comment on “Guardian Genius 267 / Soup”

  1. Thanks duncanshiell and Prof Soup!

    Good one.

    16 numbered lights and 30 clues; 8d – a confirmed anchor. Got COLLISION COURSE early that selected its placement crossing the O in 8d.
    11-letter and 6-letter solutions did not have 4-letter or 9-letter solutions to pair with. So, overlapping was indicated.
    With 21 cold-solved solutions not including the 2 anchors, I began to enter.

    Symmetry dictated what the combinations are and where they go. Since “5d” is 8/8, “2d” has to be 8/8. Since “7a” was 7/11 with 3-letter overlap, “16a” has to be 11/7, with ‘ING’ being shared. With the crossers I got the 7 solutions I did not have when I started filling in.

    Hugely satisfying when completed.

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