Financial Times no.14,533 by Rosa

I thought this was a marvellous puzzle from a setter I don’t think I’m familiar with (in this guise at least): witty, inventive, original and challenging. It was such a fun solve I was even prepared to overlook the occasional over-contrived clue or questionable phrasing. Thank-you, Rosa.

Across
1 LAWYER Long heart-to-heart with your local solicitor? (6)
L [long] (he)a(rt) w [with]  yer [local or colloquial form of ‘your’]
4 EDIFICES Prince excluded from redevelopment of specified buildings (8)
Anagram of specified minus p [prince]
9 SPOT ON Ban on circuses, in retrospect, is absolutely right (4,2)
Reversal of no tops [ban on circuses]
10 STRAW MEN Smart New Labour shams (5,3)
Anagram of smart new
12 GRUESOME Voice became a little repulsive (8)
Grue [sounds like grew, became]  some [a little]
13 DREDGE Doctor’s keenness to clear bed (6)
Dr [doctor]  edge [keenness]
15 SKIN Asking, like Andersen’s emperor, for coat (4)
(A)skin(g); Andersen’s emperor was, of course, naked
16 WRITING Dictator’s correcting text (7)
Sounds like righting [correcting]
20 WOE IS ME The end of romance is accepted by most women, alas (3,2,2)
(Romanc)e  is within wome(n)
21 MEGA Smashing a treasure from the east (4)
Reversal of a gem [a treasure]
25 TWO-WAY How amazing to stand in river flowing in both directions! (3-3)
Wow [how amazing] within Tay [river]
26 UNDERSEA Endures a tour in submarine (8)
Anagram of endures a
28 FLAMINGO Exotic bird flipping over (8)
Flaming [flipping]  o [over]
29 KOPECK Blow kiss for Russian copper (6)
KO [knockout, blow]  peck [kiss]
30 ENDANGER Threaten to kill bug (8)
End [kill]  anger [bug, annoy]
31 YEARLY Peer into yards on a regular basis (6)
Earl [peer, nobleman] within Y Y [yards]
Down
1 LAST-GASP Desperate pal’s stag do (4-4)
Anagram of pals stag
2 WHODUNIT Mystery of Welsh bricklaying gang (8)
W [Welsh]  hod unit [bricklaying gang]
3 EGOISM Perhaps female shuns bravery for self-interest (6)
Heroism [bravery] with her [female] replaced by eg [for example, perhaps]
5 DOTS Idiots sans eyes, we hear . . . . (4)
Idiots minus Is [sounds like ‘eyes’]
6 FLAGRANT Notorious old lady in uniform (8)
Gran [old lady] within flat [uniform]
7 COMEDY Play has to happen over 24 hours, answer goes (6)
Come [happen]  day [24 hours] minus A [answer]
8 SINGER She has sex with many, but not with choirboy? (6)
Swinger [she has sex with many] minus w [with]
11 EMBROIL Implicate yours truly over manipulation of Libor (7)
Reversal of me [yours truly] anagram of libor
14 STAMINA Spurs turned up without energy or staying power (7)
Reversal of animates [spurs] minus e [energy]
17 POTATION One in a hundred supports fund for the drinking of alcohol (8)
Pot [fund] I [one] within a ton [a hundred]
18 MENSWEAR Blokes curse Y-fronts, among other things (8)
Men [blokes]  swear [curse]
19 MALARKEY Cock bird getting closer to mate in springtime (8)
Lark [bird]  (mat)e within May [springtime]; ‘cock’ is used in the obscure sense ‘nonsense’
22 STIFLE Silence a bunch of pigs, reportedly (6)
Sounds like sty-ful [bunch of pigs]
23 TOWARD For headless chicken time is over (6)
[time]  (C)oward [chicken]
24 BEGONE Fervently ask individual to get lost (6)
Beg [fervently ask]  one [individual]
27 OGRE Monster conger-eel regularly escaping (4)
Alternate letters from cOnGeR eEl

 

10 comments on “Financial Times no.14,533 by Rosa”

  1. Thanks for the great blog, Ringo, especially for the last two or three in the bottom left corner, where I’d run into the buffers.

    A marvellous puzzle, as you say, with all the hallmarks of one of my top favourite setters. I have my suspicions …

    Huge thanks, Rosa, whoever you are – I loved it! 😉

  2. Thanks Rosa Klebb for a hugely entertaining puzzle and Ringo for the blog.

    To me, one of the things that distinguishes a really good puzzle from a merely good puzzle is the number of words which have completely different meanings in surface and cryptic readings of the clue. This puzzle scores very highly on that criterion.

    I had already read the preamble before solving, so was on the lookout for questionable phrasing. The only one I could see was in 20ac, where I am not completely happy with “most women” to mean “most of the word WOMEN”. I would prefer something like “almost all women”, which would (I think) give almost as good a surface, but I know I am in a very small minority in this preference, and of course expect setters to follow the majority view.

    Another issue which I know affects different solvers differently is the nature of the grid. My preference is to solve just one clue from scratch, and then try to work out from there. I have seen bloggers and other commenters talk about number of clues solved on the first pass (or similar remarks), so I assume they go at things differently. For my approach, a grid that splits into isolated quarters as badly as this one does is highly undesirable. However, in the case of today’s puzzle, the sheer joy of solving the clues was ample compensation. I have asked before about how much freedom FT setters have in the choice of grid but have not seen a clear answer.

  3. Thank you to Rosa for an entertaining struggle and to Ringo for the explanations. Lots to enjoy in this one. Thanks to Rosa too – like Eileen I do have my suspicions as to your identity 😉

  4. I really enjoyed this. I usually start each day with the Guardian cryptic, and turn to the FT if that doesn’t give me enough of a fix. But today, intrigued by Rosa Klebb, who I hadn’t seen as a setter before, I started with this one, and I’m glad I did.

    Not an easy solve, but witty and entertaining, and satisfying to complete. The south-west corner was the most elusive for me, until I finally twigged sty-ful, having racked my brains trying to think of collective nouns for pigs.

    I see that the “Setters” page of Fifteensquared has already identified Rosa Klebb as the excellent spider lady. Does the new name hint at a more sadistic approach? Bring it on, Ms Klebb, I can take any amount of this torture! 😉

  5. Eileen @5; you’ve only got to look at Arachne under Setters here to find Rosa Klebb [From Russia with Love! 😉 ] Thanks Rosa/A; what a treat to have two of you today. Another cracking puzzle!

    Thanks Ringo; some super clues. Some of my favourites were LAWYER, FLAMINGO, WHODUNIT, SINNER, MENSWEAR etc….

  6. I suspected Anarchism at play, thanks to her, 8d was naughty but nice and 29 fitted well with the new pseudonym.

    Merci Ringo for the confirmations.

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