Independent 12,321 by Bluebird

Bluebird provides today’s challenge.

We found this to be something of a curate’s egg of a puzzle, with some good surfaces and ingenious wordplay, but also one or two easy write-ins, a very unusual word at 3d and at least one vague definition (eg 1ac – our last one in – ‘name’).

We only tumbled to the ‘name’ required at 1ac when we had finally teased out the theme at 19d. Having sorted out the theme, we enjoyed finding the other thematic entries – we reckon there are nine, as highlighted below – can anyone out there find any more?

A ‘wonder’ful puzzle – many thanks to Bluebird.

 picture of the completed grid

ACROSS
1. Name of street one fruit thief crosses (6)
STEVIE

ST (street) + I (one) in (‘crossed by’) EVE (‘fruit thief’ – in the Garden of Eden)

4. I don’t know, on reflection, where Napoleon went, OK? (8)
PASSABLE

PASS (‘I don’t know’ – in a quiz) + a reversal (‘on reflection’) of ELBA (‘where Napoleon went’)

10. Being moving fences closer to breach our border (9)
NEIGHBOUR

An anagram (‘moving’) of BEING round (‘fencing’) H (last letter or ‘closer’ of breach) + OUR

11. One runs parts of course for ages (5)
YEARS

A (one) R (runs) in (‘parting’) YES (‘of course’)

12. Young man caught something floating in the sea (3)
BOY

A homophone (‘caught’) of BUOY (‘something floating in the sea’)

13. Invasive medical procedures kill great apes (11)
ENDOSCOPIES

END (kill) OS (outsize – ‘great’) COPIES (apes)

14. Essentials and some money carried by little pigs (9)
RUDIMENTS

DIME (‘some money’) in (‘carried by’) RUNTS (little pigs)

16. Prepare Turkey‘s leaders in Syria to undertake further forays (5)
STUFF

First letters or ‘leaders; in Syria To Undertake Further Forays

18. Number that’s square and a multiple of 2 (5)
SEVEN

S (square) EVEN (a number that’s ‘a multiple of two’)

19. Something being made from recipe cooked with wok (9)
WORKPIECE

An anagram (‘cooked’) of RECIPE and WOK

21. Wes Streeting’s number two and I leaving cabinet member where he works (11)
WESTMINSTER

WES T (second letter or ‘no.2’ in Streeting) + MINiSTER (cabinet member) with ‘i’ ‘leaving’

23. The first two letters sent west intercepted by Republican supporter (3)
BRA

A reversal (‘sent west’) of A B (first two letters) round (‘intercepted by’) R (Republican)

24. Arabs in cars taking time out (5)
MOORS

MOtORS (cars) missing (‘taking out’) ‘t’ (time)

25. Detailed talk by revolutionary Christian (9)
ELABORATE

ORATE (talk) after (‘by’) a reversal (‘revolutionary’) of BALE (Christian Bale, the actor)

26. Strange noises in empty nunneries generating unwanted scrutiny (8)
NOSINESS

An anagram (‘strange’) of NOISES in NunnerieS missing the middle letters or ’empty’

27. Outlaw heading to trattoria on the outskirts of Brindisi (6)
BANDIT

T (first letter or ‘heading’ of trattoria) after (‘on’) B AND I (first and last letters or ‘outskirts’ of Brindisi)

DOWN
1. Firstly, dunnocks and goldfinches, and siskins, robins, larks? (9)
SONGBIRDS

A clue-as-definition: An anagram (‘larks’) of D, G, S (first letters of dunnocks, goldfinches and siskins) and ROBINS

2. Inventive American dropping son outside of fancy school (5)
EDIFY

EDIson (Thomas Edison – ‘inventive American’) missing (‘dropping’) ‘son’ + F Y (first and last letters or ‘outside’ of fancy)

3. I see ruffled hen, saving skin, jump on mongoose (9)
ICHNEUMON

I C (see) + an anagram (‘ruffled’) of HEN + jUMp missing (‘saving’) the first and last letters or ‘skin’ + ON – a new word for us

5. Books Mike removed from sofa’s sides (7)
ARRESTS

ARmRESTS (‘sofa’s sides’) with the ‘m’ (Mike in the phonetic alphabet) ‘removed’

6. For example – narcissists, at heart, love authority (3-2)
SAY-SO

SAY (‘for example’) S (middle letter or ‘heart’ of narcissists) O (love)

7. Have sex in Bude, thereby attain happiness (9)
BEATITUDE

EAT (have) IT (sex) in BUDE

8. Characters seen in Mothercare as escalator slows down (5)
EASES

Hidden (‘characters seen’) in MothercarE AS EScalator

9. Yellow piece of wood lifted over foxhole (6)
GOLDEN

A reversal (‘lifted’) of LOG (piece of wood) + DEN (‘foxhole’)

15. Crossword setter had raised ideas in classes (9)
DIVISIONS

A reversal (‘raised’) of I’D (‘crossword setter had’) + VISIONS (ideas)

16. Aged megastar starts to soup up a car (9)
SUPERNOVA

S U (first letters or ‘starts’ of soup up) PER (a) NOVA (Vauxhall Nova – ‘car’)

17. Loud, naked creep, a man – one who’s uninhibited (4,5)
FREE AGENT

F (loud) + cREEp missing the first and last letters or ‘naked’ + A GENT (man)

19. Senior editor immediately knocked up puzzles (7)
WONDERS

A reversal (‘knocked up’) of SR (senior) ED (editor) NOW (immediately)

20. Ceremonial uniform seen in criminal trial (6)
RITUAL

U (uniform in the phonetic alphabet) in an anagram (‘criminal’) of TRIAL

21. Girl who grew up without boyfriend (5)
WOMAN

WO (without) MAN (‘boyfriend’)

22. One creating a carving of mother and child (5)
MASON

MA (mother) SON (child)

23. Furry thing on Dickens’ face (5)
BEARD

A clue-as-definition: BEAR (‘furry thing’) D (first letter or ‘face’ of Dickens)

 

16 comments on “Independent 12,321 by Bluebird”

  1. Hovis

    Another WONDERful Bluebird crossword. I do enjoy his (?) style of clueing. Forgot to look for any theme and so that provides the icing on the top.

  2. Doofs

    Annoyingly the theme passed me by, I only seem to have a 50% success rate with themes. I’d only heard of the parasitic wasp at 3d, didn’t know it applied to some mongooses. Much to enjoy but a slower, two coffee, solve today.
    Thank you B,J & B

  3. PostMark

    Agree with Hovis in every respect. (And, yes, Bluebird is indeed a he). Beautiful, succinct, meaningful surfaces.

    Thanks to setter and bloggers.

  4. Petert

    I am another who found this more of an Easter egg, stuffed with goodies, than the curate’s egg. ENDOSCOPIES made me smile (not often one can say that) and I liked the “aged megastar”

  5. ele

    Really enjoyed this one. Like Doofs@3 only knew ICHNEUMON as the parasitic wasp but it couldn’t be anything else. Didn’t get the theme of course – how does WONDER go with STUFF BTW. Many thanks to Bluebird and to B&J for some parsing, especially 1d which was my first one in but I couldn’t see how it worked.

  6. Bertandjoyce

    ele – Wonder Stuff is a rock band.

  7. sofamore

    Excellent. Annoyed that I missed the theme but I usually do, and that I couldn’t solve 1a. Tricky def but EVE for ‘fruit thief’ is very good. Liked the clue for SONGBIRDS a lot, didn’t mind a few easy entry points and enjoyed the humourous tone Bluebird sets his puzzles with. Thanks for the blog and the challenge.

  8. TFO

    Thanks both. Entertaining in the main, let down for me by the awfully inadequate definition for STEVIE, when we have Nicks which may have worked alongside fruit thief, and the unfortunate but perhaps necessary mongoose. I do tend to miss themes unless there are more participating entries

  9. Big Al

    One of our occasional forays into Indy territory (we usually do the FT these days) but it was worthwhile. We spotted STEVIE and WONDER[s) but didn’t make any further connection. We did know ICHNEUMON as both mongoose and parasitic wasp. However, although we’ve seen it before, we missed the ‘first AND last’ trick in 27ac and thought ‘outlaw’ was doing double duty – should have known better.
    Thanks, Bluebird and B&J.

  10. E.N.Boll&

    Wow. Started this at 6am, finished at 6pm,
    but still quite proud of meself.
    ( I did spend the day at Haydock races in between, where I did better with the horses than Bluebird’s clues ).
    Brilliant and challenging setting. Very tough, yet very fair. The theme, passed over my head, I wonder why?
    Is Supernova a link to Wonderwall? I think there was an Oasis “mash-up”, as the young people say…apparently. And the artist “wonder” had a rap, ” bandits”.
    I think I’ve lost the plot.
    Eggsellent, albeit a tough egg to crack.
    Yolking aside, Wonder Full Stuff, BB+B+J

  11. Bluebird

    Thanks as ever to Bert and Joyce for the blog and to those who’ve taken the time to comment – it’s much appreciated.

    I thought that the curate’s egg was just plain bad but that he was too polite to say so. Hopefully that’s not the case here.

    My intention was for there to be SEVEN WONDERS to find – STEVIE _ (sorry about the definition), BOY _, GOLDEN _, _ YEARS, _STUFF, _BRA, _ WOMAN.

  12. Tony Santucci

    Thanks Bluebird. That was slow going for me but I got there in the end except for ARRESTS. I missed the theme (didn’t look for one) but I enjoyed this nonetheless with ENDOSCOPIES, ELABORATE, EDIFY, SUPERNOVA, and RITUAL being favourites. Thanks B&J for the blog.

  13. AP

    I’m another who greatly enjoyed this and yet who didn’t stop to consider a theme (which was silly because when an uncommon forename and a slightly non-crosswordy word such as WONDERS appear, it should be enough to trigger an a-ha moment. It rarely is with me though.)

    I don’t disagree with our bloggers’ initial analysis but I didn’t feel that the puzzle was let down in any way. (OK one or two were very easy, but I found that helpful as the puzzle was quite chewy in places). I took longest in the NW, and I shared the faves others have mentioned, plus the amusing ARRESTS, while the joke in SEVEN (i.e. it not being the obvious “four”) particularly tickled me and makes it my top pick. [Here in Spain the equivalent of Royal Mail is Correos and their colour is yellow. Their delivery vans have recently gone electric, and there is a slogan on each eyecatchingly yellow vehicle, “This van is green”. Always makes me smile!]

    Thanks both

  14. Bertandjoyce

    Thanks AP – your comment made us laugh this morning!

    Bluebird – we checked. Chambers defines ‘curate’s egg’ as anything of which some parts are excellent and some parts are bad. We apologise. Perhaps our comment was a bit strong as none of the clues were ‘bad’. Most were excellent and we liked the theme.

  15. AP

    B&J@15, great! Yeah that’s the currently accepted meaning of Curate’s egg. The original was undoubtedly that which our setter@11 gives. I don’t think there was really any scope for confusion though!

  16. Bluebird

    No need to apologise, Bert and Joyce – it’s all good – I was just riffing on the changing meaning of that phrase.

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.