Reviews index | & lit. homepage | Try the
puzzle
B |
1. Footman
having to plough yard. EYBIWK
(FLUNKY; flunk + y). The first of the encoded solutions and a
straightforward clue. To plough is to fail one’s exams. The unchecked pair at the end ensures that the solver has
built and understood the Playfair grid.
5. Old US
’tec, amateur when dodgy behaviour’s around.
SHAMUS (ham in sus). Another detective word to add to the
gumshoes and busies. The wordplay isn’t obvious, as the abbreviation ‘Am.’
looks a likely contents.
12. Black man
making bear (American) run. BROOK (B rook). A difficult clue
to parse, containing two definitions, ‘bear’ (brook2) and
‘(American) run’ (a brook or stream). A rook is a chessman.
13. Blood was
high, leader lost, in retreat. KNUT
((s)tunk, rev.). A knut (see under nut in Chambers)
is a young blood (‘a swaggering dandy’). With the first letter unchecked, Dr
Watson had to trawl the dictionary to find it.
16. Team showing
signs of aging, relegated? SIDELINED
(side lined). Thankfully, Azed knows and often shows that clues don’t need to
be difficult to be clever and entertaining.
18. Wallaby
No. 2 in penalty infringement, right?
RCERNIFS (OFFSIDER; offside r). The least familiar of the subordinates, in
the Northern hemisphere, anyway. Dr Watson spent some time looking for
wallabies in Chambers, but ‘Wallaby No. 2’ is the slightly suspect
definition. ‘Wallaby’ itself doesn’t mean Australian, though it does refer to
the rugby team. So a Wallaby No. 2 wouldn’t necessarily be subordinate, in fact
he’d be their hooker. An offsider could be a sidekick, but that’s stretching
the pun too far.
19. Staff
inadequately blunder – many will conceal this.
BIEGOPTA (UNDERMAN; hidden). An easier clue, though Azed steers the solver away from
the thematic meaning of the solution.
28. One in
Utgard encountered people identically headed.
ETEN ((m)et (m)en). Utgard is the land of etens or giants in
Norse legend. ‘Met’ and ‘men’ are decapitated in the same way, having their M’s
removed.
32. Younger
mussels one goes for in jar. LIANRS
(JUNIOR; Unio for a in jar). An awkward clue in two ways. The instruction
to replace ‘a’ with a synonym of ‘mussels’ (Unio is a mussel genus) is
presented in a roundabout way. And then there’s the question of what to do with
the J that doesn’t appear in the Playfair square. The answer is to treat is as
an I.
1. In the
forest depths, poetic tomb’s reconstructed after life’s end. EMBOST ((lif)e + anag.). Dr Watson was
delighted to discover a word (emboss2) meaning both ‘to go
into the depths of a wood’ and ‘to make foam at the mouth’.
5. Lawrence –
or one such initially joining the navy in south-east. STERNE (T.E. RN in SE). The two Lawrences are Lawrence Sterne,
author of Tristram Shandy, and T.E. Lawrence, of Arabia.
4. Menial
taken in by Olympian, a superior pro.
HETAERA (eta in Hera). An eta was a Japanese of low social class
and Hera the wife of Zeus, while a hetaera was a courtesan of ancient Greece.
7. Greatly
belittling what’s small and unimportant, now forgotten, I lie about one. MINIFICATION (min(now) + I + a in fiction). The wordplay is
unbalanced, possibly deliberately, using six words to indicate the first three
letters. But this is less of a problem than the horrible trap that awaits the hurrying solver. The unchecked
letters allow ‘minimisation’ or ‘-ization’ as well as the correct solution, and
Chambers lists ‘belittle’ as one of its meanings. Anyone thinking ‘well,
it must work somehow’ and not scanning up the ‘minis’ is in for a
disappointment. Hopefully inability to resolve the ‘s’ and ‘z’ with the
wordplay will have led solvers to give the clue more thought.
17. Independent
couples embracing computer science is flattering, you might say. IMITATES (I + IT in mates). An allusion to the saying ‘imitation is the
sincerest form of flattery’.
18. Quarry worker or pop musician? ROCKMAN (2 meanings). Accepting that pop and rock music
overlap, a very straight clue for a word not found in Chambers. Dr
Watson recalled that The Beatles were originally called The Quarrymen, but it
was a red herring.
21. A
cornerstore’s tangled with ——: an error possibly! TESCO (comp. anag. & lit.). A neat reference to the
supermarket giant’s relentless domination of the retail trade, but Dr Watson
wasn’t entirely happy with the clue, which, if it is & lit., appears to
have two anagram indicators, ‘tangled’ and ‘possibly’.
23. Palaeozoic
arthropod showing round eye part, for unlimited viewing within. OLENUS (O + U in lens). A
well-constructed clue to a type of trilobite. U is the least restrictive film classification.
27. Characters
leading in great operatic roles? Here’s one.
IGOR (first letters). The semi-& lit. clue refers to Borodin’s
opera Prince Igor.
Across: 10. MUSTELINE (must4
(rud)e line); 14. OROGEN (anag.); 15. RAMIST (Ra mist); 24. SCREWBALL (screw ball); 25. MATOKE (atok in me); 26. SORTIE (anag.); 29. COIGN (Co(ps) + anag.); 30. TERRAFORM (anag.); 31. ESSENE (anag. + E). Down:
2. YARR (hidden); 3. BLOOD-LETTERS (lo
+ anag. all in betters); 4. IMOGEN (mog
in i.e. + n); 8. UNUSEFUL (sun-u(p),
rev. + anag.); 9. SET-TOS (set + sot,
rev.); 11. SINIC (comp. anag. &
lit.); 19. BEMETE (met in bee); 20. PREIFE (hidden rev.); 22. ABROMA (A bro ma).
Reviews index | & lit. homepage | Try
the puzzle