Independent 8,479 / Radian

Radian has served up one of his characteristic themed puzzles for this week’s Tuesday slot.

I found this a medium-difficulty Radian crossword, with fairly accessible gateway clues, but with enough intricate cross references to make it a challenge and enough flair and originality to make it an enjoyable solve. I say gateway clues in plural in that there were two, at 7/16 and at 12/21, and solving either of them would have helped with the other since the semantic field is the same. Radian has cleverly exploited the cryptic potential of 21 as an anagram indicator for the entry at 12. Obviously, once you twigged what he was doing, the solutions at 22A and 22D slotted into place fairly quickly.

I enjoyed this puzzle very much overall, but if pressed to nominate clues-of-the day, I would plump for 4, for its original construction, and 26, for its cleverly disguised definition.

I found myself wondering what purists would have thought of “here and there” to indicate the selection of alternate letters at 9, or indeed of 12 and 18 both appearing as grid entries, although neither of these potential quibbles bothered me unduly in what was such an entertaining puzzle.

*(…) indicates an anagram; definitions are italicised; // separates definitions in double-definition clues 

Across    
     
08 VERBALLY Extremely entertaining dance, so to speak

BALL (=dance) in VERY (=extremely)

     
09 ESPRIT Sparkling quality of Welsh persists here and there

<w>E<l>S<h> P<e>R<s>I<s>T<s>; “here and there” is used here to mean alternative letters only

     
10 CANT Type 16 hasn’t the ability without 6

CANT (=hasn’t the ability); “without apostrophe” (=entry at 6); cant is a “type of speech” (=entry at 16)

     
11 CLEAR AS MUD Obscure record covers as a rule mad Mike collected

*(AS A RULE + M (=Mike, i.e. in radio telecommunications)) in CD (=record); “mad” is anagram indicator

     
14 REPORTED Type 16 embarrassed about ornate trope

*(TROPE) in RED (=embarrassed); “ornate” is anagram indicator; reported (speech) is a “type of speech” (=entry at 16) in linguistics, e.g. He said that ….

     
15 ORATION Type 16 surgery bans exercises

O<pe>RATION (=surgery); “bans exercises (=PE)” means letters “pe” are not used; an oration is a “type of speech” (=entry at 16)

     
17 INSPIRE Move home – father’s penny-pinching

IN (=(at) home) + [P (=penny) in SIRE (=sire)]

     
20 STACKS UP Chimneys erected? Makes sense

STACKS (=chimneys) + UP (=erected)

     
22 SHERPA 21/12 porter

*(PHRASE); “turn of” is anagram indicator; “turn of phrase” is entry at 21/12; sherpas often carry mountaineers’ equipment, hence “porter”

     
23 TROLLEY CAR Fancy Tracey enjoying it in tram!

ROLL (=it, i.e. sex) in *(TRACEY); “fancy” is anagram indicator

     
24 PART Separate article, for example, if 16 follows

The (definite/indefinite) article is a “part of speech” (=entry at 16); to separate is to part, split

     
25 POETIC Quote work that’s revolutionary like Byron’s

CITE (=quote) + OP (=work); “that’s revolutionary” indicates reversal

     
26 RIPENESS Mature stage writer rises, bent over

PEN (=writer, i.e. writing implement) in *(RISES); “bent” is anagram indicator

     
Down    
     
01 METAPHOR 7/16 does poet harm

*(POET HARM); “does” is used here as anagram indicator; a metaphor is a “figure of speech” (=entry at 7/16)

     
02 OBIT Remarks on passing old 24A

O (=old) + BIT (=part, i.e. entry at 24A); cryptically, an obit(uary) is a set of remarks made when someone passes away, hence “on passing”

     
03 CLICHE Tired 21/12 shocked Chronicle after Ron quit

*(CH<ron>ICLE); “shocked” is anagram indicator; “after Ron quit” means letters “ron” are dropped from anagram; a cliché is a “tired – i.e. hackneyed, overused – turn of phrase” (=entry at 21/12)

     
04 BY HEART Music by Rogers, lyrics —, sung from memory

Homophone (“sung”) of Hart; the reference is to the song-writing partnership between composer Richard Rodgers and lyricist Lorenz Hart, hence “music by Rodgers, lyrics by Hart

     
05 TERRAPIN Swimmer hauls up one salmon in net

[I (=one) + PARR (=salmon)] in NET; “hauls up” indicates vertical reversal

     
06 APOSTROPHE A 24A/16 initially, 7/16 Henry put into punctuation

A + P<art> O<f> S<peech> (=entry at 24A/16; “initially” means first letters only) + [H (=Henry in TROPE (=figure of speech, i.e. entry at 7/16)]

     
07/16 FIGURE OF SPEECH Huge fee for pics spoiled rhetorical feature

*(HUGE FEE FOR PICS); “spoiled” is anagram indicator

     
13 ARTICULATE Showing fluency 16 // with joints

Double definition: articulate means “showing fluency of speech (=entry at 16)” AND “with joints”, i.e. connected, not disjointed

     
18 REPHRASE Note E sharp’s transposed, put differently

RE (=note, i.e. in music) + *(E SHARP); “transposed” is anagram indicator

     
19 EPICURE English film disheartened bon vivant

E (=English) + PIC<t>URE (=film; “disheartened” means middle letter dropped)

     
21/12 TURN OF PHRASE Trope shaper?

*(SHAPER); “turn of” is anagram indicator; here, the grid entry is a cryptic clue to the wordplay element of the clue proper

     
22 SERAPH 21/12 angel

*(PHRASE); “turn of” is anagram indicator; “turn of phrase” is entry at 21/12

     
24 PUNS People like me like them turned head to tail

S-PUN (=turned); “head to tail” means first letter goes to end of word; “people like me”, from Radian’s perspective, are crossword compilers!

     

11 comments on “Independent 8,479 / Radian”

  1. Thanks, RR, for the blog and Radian for a cracker of a puzzle – brilliant stuff and a lot of fun to work out. [And blow the purists!]

    Re 10ac: the answer to 6 is APOSTROPHE, so the wordplay is CANT = CAN’T, without the apostrophe.

  2. Thanks, Eileen, for the correction – how amazing that the clue in question worked with both apostrophe and figure, although less well with figure, as the clue suggested can’t, not cannot.

    I am blogging from a hotel in Riga, jumping between screens, since the dodgy printer at the hotel won’t let me print out the puzzle, hence the confusion. Business travel and blogging are not always easy activities to combine 😉

  3. Agree with others, ingenious clueing, entertaining puzzle. Thanks to Radian and RatkojaRiku.

    18D the anagram is of E SHARP.

  4. Thanks RR. When I see Radian’s name on a puzzle I usually expect a tough one, and with it being themed one, I was a bit apprehensive. But it was all clearly clued and most enjoyable – thank you to the setter. I especially liked the way Radian interlinked all the themed clues.

  5. Usually, Tuesday is a day on not completing the crossword for me, but this was a pleasant surprise. Got the gateway clues quickly and after that it mostly came out. Couldn’t see 24dn at which point I went for a walk, and it came to me almost as soon as I’d gone out the door. So, easier than yesterday’s even.

  6. I found this easier than yesterday, despite thinking it would be awful when I saw all those interlinked clues. I got figure of speech as soon as I looked at it, which gave the theme away. Thankfully, there weren’t too many obscure figure of speech words (no synecdoche or aposiopesis). The only one I didn’t quite follow was 23 – thought the roll bit was something to do with “rolling in it”.

  7. Joyce’s brain was somewhat addled last night and this morning when the puzzle was completed but Bert would agree that this was a very entertaining puzzle! Crafty combinations and inventive clueing.

    After reading the comments Joyce now wishes she hadn’t walked so far yesterday and drunk so much afterwards! Sorry Radian, she promises to do better next time.

    Thanks RR, hope the work is going well – thanks for the blog! We can recommend retirement and walking the North Norfolk coastal path!

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