Financial Times 18,365 by GOLIATH

A thoroughly enjoyable solve from Goliath.

Some excellent clues at just the right level of tricky and a great range of clue types. Thanks to the setter!

 picture of the completed grid

ACROSS
1. Like gold, the bum wobbles and it’s highly visible (1,4,5)
A SORE THUMB

AS (like) + OR (gold) + (THE BUM)* (*wobbles)

6. Part of church starting out in error (4)
APSE

[l]APSE (error, starting out)

9. George Orwell or George Sand? (3,2,5)
NOM DE PLUME

Cryptic definition

Two examples of noms de plume

10. Solipsistic expression of cultural item (4)
MEME

ME ME (solipsistic expression)

12. You’re fiddling with my lists for some strange reason (12)
MYSTERIOUSLY

(YOU’RE with MY LISTS)* (*fiddling)

15. Kitchen feature lacking whisky blowing off troublemaker (9)
HOBGOBLIN

HOB (kitchen feature) + BLO[w]ING* (lacking W (whisky, NATO alphabet), *off)

17. Mike in band break (5)
SMASH

M (Mike, NATO alphabet) in SASH (band)

18. Criminal amongst us coming back, run! (5)
THIEF

Amongst FT< (us, <coming back): HIE (run)

19. Welsh county’s fancy instrument (9)
GLAMORGAN

GLAM (fancy) + ORGAN (instrument)

20. Sounds like their genetic material’s been rejected both ways (5,3,4)
THERE AND BACK

“Sounds like”: THEIR (i.e. THERE) + DNA< (genetic material, <been rejected) (i.e. AND<, <back)

24. Stand for Rupert? (4)

BEAR

Double definition

25. Smart denim fashion plan (10)
MASTERMIND

(SMART DENIM)* (*fashion)

26. Team leaves the Spanish flat (4)
EVEN

[el]EVEN (team, leaves EL (‘the’, Spanish))

27. A hundred times returned rogue escaper into the web (10)
CYBERSPACE

C (a hundred) + BY< (times, <returned) + ESCAPER* (*rogue)

DOWN
1. Isaac Newton’s spots (4)
ACNE

[Isa]AC NE[wton] (‘s)

2. Some resistance beginning on His Majesty’s Service (4)
OHMS

O[n] H[is] M[ajesty’s] S[ervice] (beginning)

3. Always happy ending and mellow about love? Not always (5,2,5)
EVERY SO OFTEN

EVER (always) + [happ]Y (ending) and (SOFTEN (mellow) about O (love))

4. One composer left among many (5)
HOLST

L (left) among HOST (many)

5. Notes from compiler: I left Shakespearean heroine for lead on Othello (9)
MEMORANDA

ME (compiler) + M[i]RANDA (Shakespearean heroine, I left for O[thello] (lead on))

7. They found navy recruits in accidents involving volatile gases (5,5)
PRESS GANGS

PRANGS (accidents) involving GASES* (*volatile)

8. At last the real McCoy, that’s all (10)
EVERYTHING

[th]E (at last) + VERY THING (real McCoy)

11. Badly roofed, as such a precarious structure (5,2,5)
HOUSE OF CARDS

(ROOFED AS SUCH)* (*badly)

13. Kentish town is a bit steady (10)
WHITSTABLE

WHIT (a bit) + STABLE (steady)

14. Former student taught to destroy (10)
OBLITERATE

OB (former student, old boy) + LITERATE (taught)

16. Fabulous lady with green salad (9)
LEGENDARY

(LADY with GREEN)* (*salad)

21. In combat, hero gets to ablute (5)
BATHE

[com]BAT HE[ro] (in)

22. Simone and Juliet leaving warrior (4)
NINA

NIN[j]A (warrior, J (Juliet, NATO alphabet) leaving)

23. He or she supporting commercial cutter (4)
ADZE

ZE (he or she) supporting AD (commercial)

15 comments on “Financial Times 18,365 by GOLIATH”

  1. Martyn

    I agree there were plenty of nice clues, and I ticked EVERY SO OFTEN, and HOUSE OF CARDS

    All parsed. I do have a question: why is HOLST “one composer”? I know he was a composer, but what is the significance of “one”?

    Thanks Goliath and Oriel

  2. Geoff Down Under

    Good fun.

    Ze was new to me. I guess he or she is a bit cumbersome, but I’ve always got around it with they, despite its being plural to the purists.

    The two UK geography clues were a challenge, but I have Pelham to thank for suggesting a week or two ago that I remember GLAMORGAN.

    The clue for NOM DE PLUME would be at home in a non-cryptic puzzle.

  3. Geoff Down Under

    Martyn, I think the “one” is just to juxtapose the “many”.

  4. James P

    Very enjoyable. Liked house of cards, thanks both.

  5. Jay

    In 7D I think you double counted the A

  6. Roz

    Thanks for the blog , very good overall and the same ticks as Martyn@1 , but not sure that two clues actually work .
    Jay@5 mentions PRESS GANGS but it is not the blog , the clue itself leads to an extra A .
    THERE AND BACK – genetic material gives DNA = AND BACK so no need for rejected . Or genetic material’s been rejected simply gives AND . Is there a third way ?

  7. Babbler

    Like Roz#6 I was a bit puzzled by the “…and back”. Like Geoff#2 I had to infer the existence of “ze”.
    There are actually two composers called Holst: Gustav and his daughter Imogen.
    …Which reminds me of a clue many years ago (in the Independent I think) which was something like: “Two artists produce a third (5)” producing “Johns”. (Augustus + Gwen = Jasper)

  8. Goliath

    Apologies for the two clues highlighted by Roz and others. Sloppy checking on my part

  9. Roz

    Thank you Goliath , apologise and all forgiven , the rest was great .
    Sloppy checking by test-solver and Editor really .

  10. E.N.Boll&

    When it gets to the level of “ZE” and ” ME ME”, I am not impressed. “HIE” , for run.
    Does “there and back ” really work?
    4(d), why the “one”?
    7(d) just doesn’t work ?
    Some very accomplished clueing, but some stinkers, too.
    David wins this one.

  11. Tony Santucci

    Thanks Goliath. I enjoyed this with my top picks being EVEN, MEMORANDA, and HOUSE OF CARDS. I’m not a fan of ‘beginning’ by itself to indicate an acrostic of multiple words as in OHMS but I knew what was meant. I missed the clever MEME and the nho GLAMORGAN. Thanks Oriel for the blog.

  12. Jay

    Thank you Goliath–minor point in a tremendously enjoyable puzzle.

  13. Moly

    Excellent. Thoroughly enjoyed this one. I’ve occasionally been a bit critical of Goliath but for me this was near perfect.

    Thanks to all.

  14. mrpenney

    ZE for “he or she” is one of those attempts at language innovation that never really took off, in part because it feels so forced. Singular “they” is now the solution of choice: to refer to an individual of unknown gender, it has a surprisingly long pedigree; so the much more recent use of referring to someone of known but nonbinary gender is not that far-fetched.

  15. Martin

    Mike leading to SMASH made me think of DJ Mike Smash; the Harry Enfield creation.

    The things I wasn’t sure about have been covered precisely by Roz. Thanks for dropping by Goliath. I also didn’t know ze, but I knew the solution.

    A good puzzle. I liked CYBERSPACE, OBLITERATE; HOUSE OF CARDS and A SORE THUMB.

    Thanks again Goliath and Oriel

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