Financial Times 18,341 by JULIUS

Julius is today’s 12 across.

I don’t time myself when solving puzzles because I’m writing the blog as I go along, but if I did, I think this would the quickest Julius I have ever solved. My first pass yielded more than half the across answers and all the down ones (due to having so many crossers). The remaining across solutions were straightforward after that. You do need a bit of general knowledge to solve the puzzle, but nothing terribly obscure as long as you’ve heard of John Braine and Bertolt Brecht.

Thanks, Julius.

ACROSS
1 TROPHY WIFE
Dutch for show (6,4)
Cryptic definition
7 ECHT
Authentic German playwright (not British) (4)
(Bertolt) (Br)ECHT (“German playwright”), but not Br. (British)
9 BAKU
Airline returning its base capital (4)
BA (British Airways, so “airline”) + [returning] <=UK (“base” for BA)

Baku is the capital of Azerbaijan.

10 UNSUITABLE
Inappropriate insult beau tossed around (10)
*(insult beau) [anag:tossed around]
11 BIN BAG
Second-class area in Crosby that’s filled with rubbish (3,3)
B (second-class, as in B-road or B-movie) + A (area) in BING (Crosby)
12 COMPILER
Company fortune carried by Mister Julius in this case (8)
Co. (company) + PILE (“fortune”) carried by Mr. (Mister)
13 AMRITSAR
Indian city treated star following advanced magnetic scan (8)
*(star) [anag:treated] after A (advanced) + MRI (magnetic resonance imaging, so “magnetic scan”)
15 AUNT
Gold nugget cleaned out family member (4)
Au (chemical symbol for “gold”) + N(ugge)T [cleaned out]
17 CNUT
Danish king wounded, pierced by knight (4)
CUT (“wounded”), pierced by N (knight, in chess notation)
19 PANCETTA
Italian meat pâté can’t spread (8)
*(pate cant) [anag:spread]
22 IMPERIAL
Article introduced to endanger sovereign (8)
A (“article”) introduced to IMPERIL (“endanger”)
23 ELAPSE
Pass ultimately grave error of indiscretion (6)
[ultimately] (grav)E + LAPSE (“error of indiscretion”)
25 ADOLESCENT
A teenage Gal Gadot unboxed the French perfume (10)
(g)ADO(t) [unboxed] + LE (“the” in “French”) + SCENT (“perfune”)
26 TAPE
Record last appearance of great mimic (4)
[last appearance of] (grea)T + APE (“mimic”)
27 SCAB
Farmer’s cabbage riddled with fungal blight (4)
Hidden in [riddled with] “farmerS CABbage”
28 ANTHRACITE
Dark material that Racine exploited (10)
*(that racine) [anag:exploited]
DOWN
2 REALISM
Kingdom embracing one’s practical approach (7)
REALM (“kingdom”) embracing I’S (one’s)
3 PLUMB
Sound choice, bravo! (5)
PLUM (“choice”) + B (bravo, in the NATO phonetic alphabet)
4 YOUNGEST
Bad guy set on most junior (8)
*(guy set on) [anag:bad]
5 INSECT REPELLENT
Product that could be named Buzz Off ? (6,9)
Cryptic definition
6 ENIGMA
English mother’s ruin upset mother — it’s a mystery (6)
E (English) + <=GIN (“mother’s ruin”, upset) + MA (“mother”)
7 ERADICATE
Root out, I read, unfortunately caught before tea break (9)
*(i read) [anag:unfortunately] + C (caught, in cricket) + *(tea) [anag:break]
8 HOLBEIN
Part of Warhol being a painter (7)
Hidden in [part of] “WarHOL BEINg”
14 IN THE CLUB
As an accredited member with child? (2,3,4)
Double definition
16 ANCESTOR
Vance story exposed forebear (8)
[exposed] (v)ANCE STOR(y)
18 NOMADIC
Hill climbing, almost freezing, wandering all over the place (7)
<=DAMON (Hill, climbing) + [almost] IC(y)

Damon Hill is a former British F1 driver, who won the F1 World Drivers’ Championship in 1996.

20 TOSSPOT
Drunkard beats drunkard up (7)
<=(TOPS (“beats”) + SOT (“drunkard”), up)
21 FIESTA
Duke filled with energy beginning to attend carnival (6)
FIST (“duke”) filled with E (energy) + [beginning to] A(ttend)
24 ATTIC
Brief cryptic definition of Braine novel? (5)
English novelist John Braine’s most famous novel was “Room at the Top”, i.e. ATTIC, but it was about an ambitious accountant rather than a physical attic.

7 comments on “Financial Times 18,341 by JULIUS”

  1. Martyn

    I also found this very approachable, with everything solved and parsed. But I did need time to solve a few clues

    I ticked HOLBIEN, I have never heard of gin as mother’s ruin but I loved the expression, ANCESTOR was nicely hidden, FIESTA received a tick for not using duke = d, and I also liked PLUMB (so pithy).

    I originally entered the capital city of MALE for 9ac (LAM airlines backwards with base e), which slowed me down. BAKU is much more clever. TOSSPOT must be the 100th new English word I have learned for drunkard. And I am not familiar with Braine, so it told me a while and some googling to work out why the answer is ATTIC. Am I the only one who thinks this is a bit remote?

    Julius always seems a step up in the enjoyment stakes, and thanks to him for the puzzle. Thanks also loonapick for the blog

  2. James P

    Enjoyable contrast to the rigours of yesterday, but I wouldn’t complain if Julius made us work a little harder than this. Agree Holbein was a peach, also liked anthracite. Thanks both.

  3. Geoff Down Under

    Never heard of in the club as pregnant. Collins says it’s British slang. Likewise dutch/wife. A few people I’d not heard of, so I was looking a lot of things up. I’ve heard of a pisspot but not a tosspot.

  4. PostMark

    I am aware of Brecht but not of Braine so did need to Google him to solve LOI, ATTIC. As always with GK, you know what you know. I have certainly heard of the work in question but, with no wordplay, I had nothing else to go on . AZTEC and ARTIC both seemed unlikely but I had no reason not to rule out ANTIC. I did wonder whether Braine was going to turn out to have written in Greek which would have justified the solution, albeit in a totally different way.

    I agree with the praise for HOLBEIN, I smiled at the no-doubt politically incorrect TROPHY WIFE and also at the double self-references with COMPILER and CNUT. IMPERIAL also earned a tick.

    Thanks both

  5. grantinfreo

    Great movie (esp Simone Signoret), knew RaTT was a book but not by whom, so attic was a bung and shrug. But otherwise, yes, chestnutty and quipticy, ta J and loona.

  6. Charlie

    “Attic” in the Athens sense can also mean in a brief or elegant style, so Julius has given a straight def as well as the cryptic/punny one. Thanks to him and loonapick

  7. Eileen

    Another meticulously and wittily clued puzzle from Julius.

    Smiles for TROPHY WIFE, INSECT REPELLENT, IN THE CLUB, ENIGMA and TOSSPOT, admiration for the cleverly hidden HOLBEIN and ANCESTOR, the neat anagram for ANTHRACITE and the ingenious ADOLESCENT.

    Charlie @6 has beaten me to it in pointing out the hidden layer in 24dn. Collins: ‘Attic salt, Attic wit: refined, incisive wit’ (in contrast to the laconic style – see here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laconic_phrase)

    Thanks as ever to Julius and to loonapick for a great start to another sunny day.

First‑time commenters will receive a verification email. Once verified, your comment will be approved automatically. Please check spam/junk folders.

Leave a comment

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