Wednesday, 29 December 2021

Crossword Centre Prize Puzzle January 2022

 Obi by Wan

.............................................


 A word in each of nine across clues contains two extra letters, and a word in each of the down clues contains one extra letter. All extra letters are in the wordplay part of clues and leave real words behind. The extra letters in down clues hint at how to use all but one pair of letters from the nine across clues uniformly in the grid. Solvers should use the remaining pair appropriately writing the result under the grid. The final grid contains all real words, including one proper noun.
The Chambers Dictionary (2016) is the primary reference.
Across
1      Form of verb sentence used the wrong way (4)
4      Force husband to split responsibility (6)
10    Over half of folk want that quilt (6)
11    Wash inside sesame plant (6)
12    Basket for shop (4)
13    Restage performing ants (7)
14    Lisa playing kora for Jack (6)
15    US force is ready in Ethiopia (4)
18    Disaster forgetting one area creating birds’ areas (6)
21    Rabbit on in church yard (5)
22    Hear a large number destroyed (5)
24    Country turned inside out too (4)
25    Tired member seen around club (4)
27    Irish spirit is number 2 spirit of Egypt (5)
29    Refuge hiding weak donkey (5)
30    Worn-out French record, put to some purpose entertaining Wan (7)
33    Plants rarer in September on reflection (4)
34    Flounder - short white fish brought from east to west (6)
36    Second musical instrument for film editing machine (7)
38    Oxen driver ran to stop idol (4)
39    Racer changing side for gutter (6)
40    Stow around ten assets in centre that's unoccupied (6)
41    Anger that makes mad madder? (6)
42    Sing in the French method (4)
Down
1     Twin town in Malta with one in Scotland (4)
2     Commercial boy stops on account of works (5)
3     Empty dispenser, last, at sea, to remove chloride (6)
5     Boat bard won is more robust (5)
6     Unworldly reformer spits out rubbish (7)
7     Horses will hoof people? (6)
8     Spill rupees moving in gadi (5)
9     Hello, perhaps none are tips from nefarious sorcerers (7)
16    Seven plugs covering part of column (5)
17    Gold sold for one (4)
18    Most tint over fancy upright mouldings (5)
19    Elder, perhaps, out of Troy, opens books for spiritual leader (5)
20    A metallic element releasing bright charged particle (5)
23    Scarier knocking about stoned goofs (4)
26    Short loner for example eats in no time at all (7)
28    I grant you that Scots matelot, Ian, drank poison (7)
31    Ball of wax spinning over time (6)
32    Mainly winch all forms of species in gradation (6)
33    Temple's ruin with stuff put outside (5)
34    Widen stiff belt when trimming edges inferior in standard (5)
35    Early footless and headless being seen in compound (5)
37    Tippers perhaps carrying last of slate to protected side (4)

To enter this competition, send your entry as an image or in list format including the result below the grid, to ccpuzzles@talktalk.net before 8th February 2022. The first correct entry drawn from the hat will receive a book which has been donated by the Chambers.

Monday, 20 December 2021

Crossword News December 2021

 

Crossword News December 2021

The November Prize Puzzle was A Good One by Hawk. Misprints spell CROSS DUBLIN WITHOUT PASSING A PUB and ULYSSES. This ‘good puzzle’ mused upon by Leopold Bloom in Chapter 4 of James Joyce’s novel is depicted here by a trail between the districts of CABRA and BALLSBRIDGE, turning away as it approaches each of MULLIGAN’S, The BRAZEN HEAD, and DAVY BYRNE’S - three pubs which exist today as they did in Joyce’s day - and spelling out AA-RECOMMENDED ROUTE. The two helpful organisations were Alcoholics Anonymous or the Automobile Association.

Here are some of the comments from solvers.

A very good one indeed. Some of the misprints were incredibly well disguised, and the clashes great anagrams. Thanks and well done to Hawk.

I found this a really tough puzzle - hard clues (the ones with clashes especially so!), but what a great finish.  The grid fill was challenging enough but it took me days to complete the end game.  I kept trying to find Joycean addresses at first until I finally spotted Ballsbridge, which I should have seen at the outset (am half Irish and have been to Dublin countless times), then recognised Cabra.  Here I got hung up for quite a long time by trying to make a geographical path using street names or something similar. I could see " chart a recommended...' but as it had too many letters it was discounted.  My PDM was when I finally realised that as 'helpful societies' AA and AA were distinct yet one and the same representation and each delivered all guidance required. Brilliant, it made me laugh.  Well Done, Hawk! A super puzzle. Am looking forward to the next one.

I found this one much harder (especially identifying the "obstacles") but very satisfying. I must congratulate Hawk on (1) an intriguing and ingenious theme, (2) the neat way in which the path turns 90° ahead of each "obstacle", and (3) the clever ambiguity of the "AA" recommended route - though I had assumed that alcoholism was out of bounds for crosswords until I tackled last Saturday's Listener crossword in The Times!

A solution is available at https://crosswordcentre.blogspot.com/2021/12/solution-to-good-one-by-hawk.html

This proved to be a tough challenge with only 31 entries, of which 7 were marked incorrect. The lucky winner, picked from the electronic hat was Craig Fothergill who will be receiving a prize of Chambers Crossword Dictionary donated by the publishers.

For December we are offering three crosswords. The Prize Puzzle is the traditional Seasons Greetings by Eclogue, now in its 13th edition. The December Special is Ring Cycle by Hedge-sparrow and there is also a bonus from Artix, What’s it Look Like? There is still lots of time for you to email your solutions.

All three December puzzles will count for annual statistics and the competition for the Crowther Cup.

We will start the new year with a puzzle from the ever-popular setter, Wan. I am sure you will enjoy Obi by Wan.
***
The next Round Robin is planned for April and we are looking for volunteer clue writers. John Nicholson posted this on the message board.

I am back recruiting volunteer clue writers for what will be the 14th round-robin puzzle. For those not familiar with the process, we put a thematic grid together and ask willing members to write a clue each. Solvers can award points to their favourite clues and the setter whose clue gains the most points will receive a prize. More importantly, it is a bit of fun where we can all join in. If you have taken part before, we hope you will again, and if you haven’t please do give it a try. You can contact me on email gironanick@yahoo.com or leave a message via the messaging system on the message board.

There are two types of clue this time: half are plain and half are of the ‘wordplay leads to extra letter’ type. The answers are on a list and simply allocated in that order, one from each type alternately. However, if you particularly prefer one type please say and I will accommodate you if I can.

We would like to get your clues by the 15th January please.
***
On 26 November the death was announced of Stephen Sondheim at the age of 91. The talented songwriter was said to have reinvented the American musical. He loved crosswords and compiled them for the New York magazine. In 1968 he wrote an article about the British Crossword which is a delight to read. It was my friend Apex, the late Eric Chalkley, who got me to draw caricatures of Sondheim and Leonard Bernstein to accompany his Christmas puzzles. Eric had kept the signed solutions that they had sent him. So, when I had the idea of getting Apex an MBE, I wrote to Stephen Sondheim to ask him write a letter of commendation. He was very willing to oblige.  The other commendations came from Jonathan Crowther and Sir Jeremy Morse.

Ben Zimmer’s article describes Sondheim’s interest in puzzles. https://slate.com/culture/2021/12/stephen-sondheim-crossword-puzzles-cryptic-west-side-story.html

Alan Connor has written about Sondheim’s love of cryptic crosswords in his Guardian blog. https://www.theguardian.com/crosswords/crossword-blog/2021/dec/06/stephen-sondheims-other-job-crossword-setter
***
Cain’s Jawbone, the mystery novel written by the crossword setter Torquemada, is back in the news. And it's all thanks to Sarah Scannell, a communications assistant at a non-profit documentary company called Citizen Film in San Francisco.

She found a copy in her local bookshop, ripped out the pages, plastered them all over her bedroom wall, and charted her efforts to solve it on TikTok.

'I've decided to take this nearly impossible task as an opportunity to fulfil a lifelong dream and turn my entire bedroom wall into a murder board,' said Scannell, who is known on TikTok as @saruuuuuuugh. Her videos have been watched by seven million people.

You can read more in this Daily Mail article

***
In the Times Diary there was this passage, headed Gorman Gets a Lidl Cryptic

Nine years ago Dave Gorman was delighted to be in The Observer cryptic crossword. “Good chap, engaging alternative comedian (6)” led solvers to the comic’s surname. Now he writes them. Gorman, right, started submitting crosswords to two national newspapers in the first lockdown under the names Bluth and Django. However, some of his clues have upset traditionalists. A controversial one was “Sea seven are made poorly eating supermarket crabs, for example (8, 7)”. The first three words were an anagram (“made poorly”) that had to be wrapped round a word for supermarket (“eating”) to give a phrase for crabs. The answer, “venereal disease”, drew lots of complaints, though not because it was an unpleasant image. No, readers moaned, Gorman said, because using “Aldi” lowered the tone. There just aren’t enough phrases that contain “Waitrose”.
***
If you are a fan of the TV programme Only Connect and of tough puzzles then the Nimrod crossword in the latest edition of the Cam magazine will be ideal. Another Brick in the Wall by Nimrod

***
GCHQ has published another series of Christmas puzzles. Solve them all and you might get a job on MI6. https://www.gchq.gov.uk/files/GCHQChristmasChallenge.pdf
***
An article on the internet highlights the value of crosswords in education and language learning and gives a gentle introduction to the topic. You can read it here - https://custom-writing.org/blog/crossword-puzzles-in-learning
***
Last month I mentioned the obituaries to Anne Bradford. David Beamish has pointed out one other which appeared in The Telegraph.
Anne Bradford, author and cruciverbalist who devised the first dictionary for crossword solvers – obituary
She had the idea for her indispensable reference work in 1957 after stumbling over a clue that read: ‘An isolated pillar (India) (3).’

Anne Bradford, who has died aged 90, was a crossword wizard who compiled the first crossword solver’s dictionary, providing words or expressions – synonyms, puns and wordplays – that were possibly related to words appearing in cryptic crossword clues.

Thus the word “outstanding” in a clue might, with other pointers, suggest the answer “fugleman” – a soldier who stands out in front of the rest to demonstrate the drill. The word “scarper” might lead the solver to consider as solutions (or part-solutions), words such as bunk, run, shoo or welsh.

Though she admitted doing an average of 20 crosswords per week, Anne Bradford was no obsessive. She estimated that she was able to finish the Times cryptic in “10 minutes on a good day, six on a very good day, more like 18 to 20 on a bad one”, and her hobby occupied no longer than about an hour a day.

She also found time to write a book about Harry Whittier Frees, an eccentric photographer of animals dressed as people, curate and publish a collection of Victorian postcards, run an agency for graduate mothers looking for part-time or temporary employment, work for 20 years as a school secretary and bring up four children.

Her career as a “cataloguer of clues” began in 1957 when she stopped work to have her first child. She was stuck on a clue in the Observer cryptic crossword: “An isolated pillar (India) (3).” The answer, it transpired, was “lat”, an Urdu word for a pillar, which forms part of the word “isolated”. She decided it might be useful to have what she called a “reverse dictionary” to help herself and others struggling with such clues.

The result, first published in 1986, was the Longman Crossword Solver’s Dictionary. By 1993 it had been renamed the Bradford Crossword Solver’s Dictionary and she would continuously compile more entries based on her own cruciverbal experiences for new editions. The 12th edition was published in October.

Anna Rae Freeman was born in Jesmond, Newcastle, on November 3 1930. Her father was a dentist; her mother, who enjoyed crosswords, taught Anne to read when she was three and, as she recalled, “before long, I was very good at reading upside down, too, which is most useful if you’re playing Scrabble.”
In 1973 she would win the national Scrabble championship. She never won the Times crossword championship, however, though she was a finalist on several occasions.

During the war she was evacuated to Alnwick in Northumberland, where she was so successful at school that she was moved into a year with girls three years older than she was. She became head girl.
After reading Social Sciences at King’s College, Newcastle, then part of the University of Durham, she worked at an employment agency. In 1952 she married Francis Bradford, with whom she moved to north London, where he worked for BP. While their children were young she worked from home, running the University Women’s Part-Time Employment Agency.

Later she spent 21 years as part-time secretary at a north London prep school, worked as a volunteer adult numeracy tutor and, in her eighties, volunteered in the books section of a hospice charity shop.

Her favourite crossword clues, she told The Lady magazine in 2013, included: “Pineapple rings in syrup (9)” (answer: grenadine); “Information given to communist in return for sex (6)” (answer: gender) and “Cake-sandwiches-meat, at Uncle Sam’s party (8)” (answer: Clambake).

Telegraph readers who cannot spot the connections are clearly in need of the Bradford Crossword Solver’s Dictionary.
Anne Bradford’s husband died in 2013 and a daughter also predeceased her. She is survived by two daughters and a son.
***
On a personal note, ten days ago I went to London by train to spend some time with my son and daughter. When I returned home, I went down with a bad cold, coughing and sneezing. A PCR test confirmed that it was Covid-19. Fortunately, I was triple jabbed and after a few days I started to feel better. Now I just feel a bit tired but getting better every day.

I am looking forward to a quiet Christmas with lots of crosswords. I wish you a happy Christmas and a healthy new year.

Best wishes
Derek


 

 

Thursday, 9 December 2021

Solution to A Good One by Hawk

 Solution to A Good One by Hawk

Initial Grid


Final Grid


Misprints spell CROSS DUBLIN WITHOUT PASSING A PUB and ULYSSES. This ‘good puzzle’ mused upon by Leopold Bloom in Chapter 4 of James Joyce’s novel is depicted here by a trail between the districts of CABRA and BALLSBRIDGE, turning away as it approaches each of MULLIGAN’S, The BRAZEN HEAD, and DAVY BYRNE’S - three pubs which exist today as they did in Joyce’s day - and spelling out AA-RECOMMENDED ROUTE.





Monday, 29 November 2021

CrosswordCentre Prize Puzzle December 2021

 Seasons Greetings XIII by Eclogue



All solutions are of six letters with half of the radial entries entered inwards, the other half outwards. Counting the rings from outmost inwards, the second and fourth rings provide a list of items.  These are all “possible ingredients” verified by the source, finished article and author derived from an extra letter given by the wordplay of each clue, when read in clue order. 
1 Cabbing erratically for plastic receptacle
2 Sandy’s shelters held feeds twice
3 Rowdy feasts bear son out
4 Still happen to claim with centre versed
5 Dystopian writer, familiarly, poor sad soul
6 Mysterious sum fits mysticism
7 Froth on foot stokes noddles
8 Rock snakes upset chest and palms
9 Principality expending energy on crazy timber
10 Garments stun CIA assembly
11 Follows returning Scottish bird losing heart to chap
12 Went and hauled on board covering note
13 Bills seizing payment in muddles
14 Whisky in ebbing tide dismays no more
15 Chinese fruit trees hiding gypsy girl in restraints
16 Scoundrel almost to originate from sources of poison
17 Previously, approaches Scottish individual with blades
18 Days of prayer in autumn month with long hair swept back
19 Equine wart making one black with anger
20 Secret things using the bow in equal quantities
21 Subpolar soil reflecting hoary praise on a small drink
22 Smartly shot off in good condition in Perth
23 Clumsy fish in Aberdeen, settled and almost departed
24 Creator of Crystal Palace developed apt axon
25 Do Pete fry that’s barely warm
26 Little men entering retro group with yen 
27 Numbers getting over the sulks in opinions
28 Native American headman cut short by IT bod, say
29 Masses of loose stone borders
30 Arbitrary decrees noble embraces when special
31 Rice and meat dishes putting hairs on adult American
32 Afghani munshi is nursing hostility
33 Earl ragged in a frenzy is done
34 Weaned in the Lowlands, flung in the Highlands
35 Cheered, lie back with new date
36 Charged bribe on plot
37 Local washing in Slovenia?  That’s foolish talk
38 Drunk measures posts in Scotland
39 Responds to canters breaking out
40 Iain’s dusty and peevish in the pigpen

To enter this competition, send your entry as an image or in list format including rings 2 and 4, to ccpuzzles@talktalk.net before 8th January 2022. The first correct entry drawn from the hat will receive a book from the Chambers range, which has been donated by Chambers.



December Bonus Puzzle

 What's it Look Like? by Artix


Group A clues are listed in alphabetical order of their answers and are definition only. Two answers are abbreviations. All but one of these entries have no unchecked letters.

Group B are listed in conventional order and are normal cryptic clues, except for three to thematic answers (all of the same length) which are wordplay only. 

The unconventional bar pattern must be deduced: the three cells with no letters in them must be barred off completely. The cell with the shape inside it must have a bar on one side only.

Finally, and also in response to the title, a single thematic answer must be highlighted. 

Group A            
In the morning (2)       
Cuckoo (3)
Jewish month (2)             
Steal (old slang) (3)         
Crow (3)             
Italian author (3)        
Letter (2)            
IT interface (3)          
Stinging moth (2)         
Palm (3)             
Heraldic yellow (2)             
Tribe’s land (3)            
100 céntimos (3)        
Number (3)           
Sesame (3)           
Number (3)

 Group B
Man running around madly, full of energy (9)
Maybe Stuart’s independent females who made lots? (6)
Eager to conceal lecturer’s past explosion of wind (5)
Old ancestral Bible translations, second one incomplete (6)    
Space in network’s compound (6)
Inside church, this raunchy salt could be considerate (9, two words)
Oil and bread for the Romans, after capturing Troy (9)   
Awkward blood relative kills bolshy liar (9, three words)
Handled officer after greeting newspaper boss (6)
No. 3 from Fifty Shades of Grey? No time for that! (6)       
County Down’s supporting estate? (6)
Stop permit for bird of prey (9)
Mostly ‘green’ axes pierce cut right through (9, two words)
Finish fight in tented village (5)

   To enter this competition, send your entry as an image or in list format including the highlighted entry, to ccpuzzles@talktalk.net before 8th January 2022. The first correct entry drawn from the hat will receive a book which has been donated by the Crossword Centre..


Crossword Centre December Special 2021

 Ring Cycle by Hedge-sparrow



The unclued entries are the partial titles of six of a set of seven thematic items.  In the filled grid, solvers must draw a curved line through eight contiguous cells which spell out the partial title of the final member of the set, forming a shape that can be used to complete all the thematic items.  Extra letters (to be removed before solving) from nineteen clues spell out a phrase (two words) which, together with two other entries clued by wordplay only, provide the context.  Chambers 2016 is the primary reference:  15 is in Collins.  Brewer’s Dictionary of Phrase and Fable may also prove helpful.

Across
8 Melia balm relaxes (4)
9 Yankee tattler’s long conversation?  Not half! (5)
11 Plug hole (6)
12 Stair up to a lake in NZ (5)
13 Antique instrument, subject to abuse after gate’s bolted (4)
15 Stonier ground yields old form of female hormone (7)
17 Dine in Scotland with Moray’s chief judge (4)
18 St Francis having left the country, hides from view (7)
19 Soldier suffering fright at European WWI battle-site (5)
20 Perhaps hind quarter is causing distress for poet (5)
22 Duplicity shown by former boxer in taxi (7)
25 Once in France, as before, bring to nothing (4)
26 Arch serves to protect priest (7)
27 Starter to accompany fish jelly (4)
28 Chain variant includes low-expansion metallic alloy (5)
29 Mystery I manage to unravel (6)
31 Endless Chinese black tea precedes afternoon dance (5)
32 Disciple knocked back bottles at temple (4)
Down
1 Steam rising off one’s trolley (3)
2 Murder victim Isabella has buried in St Clair? (4)
3 Youth getting up around nine is a wise judge (6)
4 Newt I noted having ends of feet pointing inwards (6)
5 Axes applied to damaged elm’s woody tissue (5)
6 Spirits are essentially undamaged in goods washed up on shore (6)
7 Pen note about top of aspidistra growing out (5)
10 Coarse fibre that’s generally recognized as safe for Americans wearing toques? (11)
14 Sticking fast, top of fan becomes hot in consequence (9)
16 Thing that keeps admirer extremely eager (6)
21 Old Uncle Reg prepared to come out (6)
23 Throw out North Sea breaches (6)
24 Violent pains when cycling, bound for the Highlands (5)
25 Former pope’s in the city (5)
27 Nun upholding Japanese swimmer’s language (4)
30 Smile before old women make grimaces (3)

To enter this competition, send your entry as an image or in list format including the content of the curved line, to ccpuzzles@talktalk.net before 8th January 2022. The first correct entry drawn from the hat will receive a book from the Chambers range, which has been donated by Chambers.


Friday, 19 November 2021

Crossword News November 2021

 

Crossword News November 2021

The October Prize Puzzle was Masterpiece by Craft. Unclued entries gave the name of the artist, Barnett Newman, and the location of the work, the National Gallery of Canada. The work is Voice of Fire, It consists of three equally sized vertical stripes, the outside stripes are blue and the centre red. A full solution is available at https://crosswordcentre.blogspot.com/2021/11/solution-to-masterpiece-by-craft.html

Here are some of the comments from solvers.

This was a very quick grid fill (no extra letters in clues etc.) and then I needed the internet to find the work in question.  It was interesting to learn about a painting hitherto unknown to me - but very suitable for a crossword!  Thanks Craft for an entertaining puzzle.

This was an enjoyable solve with a theme new to me. I found that parsing of some clues was tricky and there are still a couple I'm not sure I fully understand. [I wonder if 16a should be 'suits'?]  Thanks to the Crossword Centre and Craft (whose puzzle in the current Magpie was a testing workout!).

Having solved about 20 clues, BA..ET. and NE.M.. were revealed and art studies paid off – Newman’s Zip paintings being ideal for straightforward colouring of crosswords.  N.TION.. and C.N.DA had also appeared by then and Voices of Fire followed quickly.  Hopefully not many solvers will know about Newman, and not just so they can enjoy all of Craft’s clues (“shell suit” and “prime locations” and “neck back” were very neat).  Newman’s paintings don’t elevate the spirit like Rothko’s colour-field works (and he was rather a one-trick pony) yet he had a high opinion of himself.  Harold Rosenberg, the notable art critic, asked what Newman’s art could possibly mean to the world, Newman: “My answer is that if he [Rosenberg] and others could read it properly it would mean the end of all state capitalism and totalitarianism.”  Many thanks to Craft

We didn’t get the record entry but 62 was a good number. However, there were 18 entries marked wrong. The main stumbling block was MAFIOSI for MAFIOSO.  Mafiosi is plural (the definition was singular) and the wordplay includes MO for Missouri, MI is Michigan.

The lucky winner, picked from the electronic hat was Daniel Brewer from Portsmouth who will be receiving a copy of Chambers Crossword Dictionary, which was donated by Chambers.

You still have lots of time to email your solution to the November puzzle, A Good One by Hawk.

For December we are offering three crosswords. The Prize Puzzle will be the traditional Seasons Greetings by Eclogue, now in its 13th edition. The December Special will be Ring Cycle by Hedge-sparrow and there will also be a bonus from Artix, What’s it Look Like?

All three December puzzles will count for annual statistics and the competition for the Crowther Cup.

ARTIX is originally from Cheshire but has lived in Geneva for the last 35 years where he runs a small independent portfolio management company. He has had over 70 puzzles published under this pseudonym over the last 10 years, including in the Magpie, Sunday Telegraph (EV and Toughie), i (Inquisitor) and the Times (Listener where he has twice been runner-up in the Ascot Gold Cup); he also has set jointly as part of Rasputin, Nudnix, OTTIX, S.M.E.R.S.H., Charismatix, Botox and Jixaur. As a solver, Artix reached the Times National Finals in 2011 and was awarded the Listener Solver Silver Salver in 2018.
***
It was very sad to note the death of Anne Bradford, the crossword genius and author of the Crossword Solver’s Dictionary. It was announced in The Times.

BRADFORD Anne Rae (née Freeman) died peacefully on 30th October 2021, aged 90. After a short stay in hospital, the celebrated author of the Bradford’s Crossword Solvers Dictionary passed away peacefully days short of her 91st birthday. She continued working on crosswords to the end. Much loved and sadly missed by family and friends. Any donations to North London Hospice.

The Times followed up with a full obituary. https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/anne-bradford-obituary-cpzndbwb2

Alan Connor wrote about her in the Guardian. https://www.theguardian.com/crosswords/crossword-blog/2021/nov/08/crossword-blog-anne-r-bradford

Although I never met Anne Bradford, we did have a friendly correspondence, her letters always hand-written on personalised cream paper. We did have much in common. She had a love of the north-east of England and had family who lived in the same suburb of Gateshead where I was brought up. Her genius will live on in her invaluable dictionary.
***
It’s that time of the year when I remind you to buy your 3D crosswords calendar for 2022. A calendar with 12 3D crosswords, composed by 12 of the best setters, and a chance to enter the 3D world championship. You can order a printed copy or download a virtual one at this link - https://3dcalendarpuzzles.co.uk/shop/
***
Although I am steering clear of TikTok, it has come to my notice that in the USA, Katie Grogg has built up a community of crossword solvers. Her site, Coffee and Crosswords, is her explaining the clues of the New York Times Crossword. Read more here -
https://www.polygon.com/22761463/crossword-puzzle-tiktok-katie-grogg
***
John and Jane have announced the date of next year’s Listener Crossword Dinner. It will be held in the Scottish city of Stirling on Saturday 26 March. Further details will be issued shortly.
***
On the Clue-writing Competition the results of the September challenge are published. A normal clue to CICERONE and the winner was Tom Borland with this.

Expert guide deployed on recce round island

Your challenge for NOVEMBER is a STANDARD CRYPTIC clue to SOUSAPHONE (10) by the closing date of MIDNIGHT GMT SUNDAY 28th NOVEMBER. http://www.andlit.org.uk/cccwc/main.php
***
There is a lovely story in the Hampstead and Highgate Express as an obituary to Bernard Marks. He was addicted to the Ham & High crossword and always entered the competitions. Read the whole story here - https://www.hamhigh.co.uk/news/obituaries/bernard-marks-the-crossword-wizz-8455778

Best wishes
Derek

 

 

 

 

 

Wednesday, 10 November 2021

Solution to Masterpiece by Craft

 Masterpiece by Craft - Solution


TITLE OF WORK: Voice of Fire

The 1967 work is Voice of Fire by Barnett NewmanIt hangs in the National Gallery of Canada..

The shaded grid represents the artwork.
Across
8  hidden
9  QU in AA
10  BAN rev
12  (b)ORDER(s)
13  GR + ANTS (6)
15  SERENADE - AD (6)
16  TON in E(lli)S
17  B(y)R(o)A(d)S
18  IN US TREAD*
23  hidden
25  (CRAFT – FT) rev
27  MATURER*
28  EDISON (TI for S)
29  OAF IS* in MO
30  (MAN in DEER) rev
31  TAN rev
33  r(ID)g(E)w(A)y
34  LAWNLINE* + G
36  BACS rev
38  PA N(e)E(d)S
41  N in TAKE + R
43  UNI + ATE
44  ALF + AS
46  u(SHE)r
47  R + EEL &lit
48  CARE*

Down
1  lim(B) + ANGLE
2  RA rev + A RAT
3  O in NUNS
4  (TOM in SEE) rev
5  acrostic
6  DU + ANNE rev
7  homophone
11  BA + YOU
14  R in ZED A
19  CHARLATAN (T for CH)
20  AIDE* in RED
22  MOZE in AREN(a)
24  OUTS + AIL
32  W in TANG
34  EST + U + ARY
35  IN + SAC rev
37  CA + BLED
38  PENS + EL
39  WITH ER (E for W)
40  (p)EER in SKY
42  IV + A in RL
45  (s)ALA(d)




Friday, 29 October 2021

Crossword Centre Prize Puzzle November 2021

 A Good One by Hawk


Corrections to single misprints in 36 clues spell out a literary challenge and its source. Clashing letters in three cells can form obstacles which, in the order they are approached, are of lengths (9), (10, two words) and (10, two words), ignoring one article. Solvers must replace each of these with an appropriate OS map symbol. Solvers must then highlight start and finish locations and a path from one to the other using cells touching at sides (32 cells in total). Solvers should take advice from either of two helpful organizations. Numbers indicate the length of grid entries. The Chambers Dictionary (2016) is the primary source. 
Across
1 Does poorly after accompanist's treated (8)
7 Star fruit trees abound (4)
10 Greek nymph briefly goes back after a coloured hat (7)
11 Alice from Digital Archives identifies Latin bible (5)
13 AC/DC getting Queen in for Asian money, in dual arrangement (8)
14 Back before church recitation concerning heralds (5)
15 Oracle's help in holy bishop's return (5)
16 Arcade adaptation's losing director, not producer (5)
17 Varieties of wild celery: herbs with old beetle infestation (6)
19 It's found in some bulls, newly born but not fed (4)
20 Antique blank panel's located at centre of wall bracket, having first removed wire (3)
22 Better stock trader overshadows Chancellor of the Exchequer (5)
26 Henry's initially knowledgeable in bulk supplying fruit tree (5)
28 Pains could be resulting from incomplete cure (3)
29 Spartan in cell to break down walls and run (4)
31 Dammed Welsh river, and energy produced within two days (6)
34 Married for Wally's rare dialect (5)
35 Print worker's largely foxed these days by script (5)
37 Dutch energy department's after space saving tips (5)
38 Liberally drain most of node that's become pustulant (8)
39 Those who could play Pergolesi's Serpina in endless battle (5)
40 Change course that's occupying entire roster (7)
41 All too often economic enterprise ends making only one dime (4)
42 Women locked us out of giant subscription boxes (8)
Down
1 Refuse stored in unfinished bar where a Hockney could hang (7)
2 Item features Cambridge-based examination board: one in the eye for the Scots (6)
3 Short copper trails parish upstart (7)
4 A sweep could be attached to this gun I fear capturing (7, two words)
5 Animating the heart of one's lost life in, say, sandwiches (5)
6 Pops out for the day (4)
7 Strong current takes a life (5)
8 Clipping relayed in jungle: it could change the course of radio (6)
9 Dunces in Britain foregoing utmost efforts (5)
12 Satisfactory rating at first for fortune teller in the east (5)
13 Entertainment gathering pens comedy skit (6)
18 Ended up being wealthy, essentially, with breeding, essentially (6)
21 Fritter's meeting bananas (7)
23 Dressing trick enthralls former SS leader (7)
24 Dreams decapitated person represents the whole world (5)
25 Nationalized haulier carrying fish, cut stone and sinks (7)
27 Go beyond ordinary flu, as before (6)
30 Riding east, note mountain plant higher up (6)
31 Turn on waterworks to treat hedges and crops (5)
32 Weapon, though concealed by punk heading off in the other direction (5)
33 Spender's hurt with costly surcharge, ultimately (5)
36 Boldly faced scrape with Glasgow thug after first sign of bullying (4)

To enter this competition, send your entry as an image or in list format including the highlighted locations and the path, to ccpuzzles@talktalk.net before 8th December 2021. The first correct entry drawn from the hat will receive a book from the Chambers range, which has been donated by Chambers.

Tuesday, 19 October 2021

Crossword News October 2021

 

Crossword News October 2021

The September Prize Puzzle was Juggling Jellyfish by Chiffchaff. It celebrated INTERNATIONAL TALK LIKE A PIRATE DAY given by extra letters in 31 clues. Thematic clues gave half of an oath given by Captain Pugwash while the other half was entered in the grid.

 First letters of extra words in seven other clues give HAT and SHIP. PUGWASH replaces captain in the completed grid and his hat is drawn in the space occupied by cap and he is shown standing on his ship, cryptically represented by a drawing of a black pig in the space occupied by pig. Juggling Jellyfish is something we felt Pugwash ought to have said but didn’t, but he did utter the other phrases given by the puzzle.

Here are some of the comments from solvers.

Took me a while to spot the theme, but a nice amusing moment when the penny finally dropped.  Wasn’t the first pirate I thought of, but it should have been!  Wondered a bit about the cryptic/thematic final requirement – have opted for showing the black pig as a black pig and the pirate hat literally, so hope that was what was intended.

Thanks Chiffchaff for filling a gap in my education by informing me there is such a thing as International Talk Like A Pirate Day, knowledge gained once I got past my fixation that  we were dealing with Tintin in the puzzle. Having three different types of clues, especially when extra letters could be anywhere in the clue, added a bit of difficulty and at the end I wasn't really sure as to whether I should be trying to draw a pirate ship or an actual black pig. Given my total lack of artistic talent, an approximation to a sailing ship got the vote.

Initially I found the puzzle to be great fun with some good clues and I enjoyed the variation of the special solutions at 1 across etc.  I was intrigued to learn of the International Talk Like a Pirate Day and cannot imagine how it had passed me by until now.  I do not know how younger solvers would know of Captain Pugwash but I am old enough to have enjoyed the double entendres (deliberate or not) at the time.  So, it was not too difficult to see that CAPTAIN should be replaced by PUGWASH.  Equally straightforward, HAT and SHIP should be the illustrations - but, one thematically and one cryptically???  My best guess is that PIG should be  replaced by a drawing of a black pig (that being the name of the aforesaid Captain's vessel) and CAP replaced by a drawing of the Captain's hat or possibly the skull and crossbones that adorned it.  As you can tell, I was all at sea over the final instruction and for me it slightly took the shine off an otherwise excellent puzzle.  Thank you, Chiffchaff.

There were 41 entries, of which 9 were marked incorrect. To put solvers’ minds at rest, the marker accepted any black pig or black ship as correct.

The lucky winners were Albert and Gail Busza, from Chiswick, who will soon be receiving a prize of Chambers Crossword Dictionary, which has been donated by Chambers.

A solution is available at https://crosswordcentre.blogspot.com/2021/10/solution-to-juggling-jellyfish-by.html Chiffchaff is a collaboration of two popular setters, Hedge-sparrow and Vismut.

You still have lots of time to email your solution to Masterpiece by Craft. https://crosswordcentre.blogspot.com/2021/09/crossword-centre-prize-puzzle-october.html

 The November Prize Puzzle will be A Good One by Hawk. This is Hawk’s first puzzle for the Crossword Centre. Fairly new to setting, Hawk made his Listener debut on Valentine’s Day 2021, with a puzzle leading to a heart-shaped box of chocolates. Hawk is the pseudonym for Julian, an IT manager from Surrey. He enjoys setting puzzles which give the solver some work to do in the endgame - “A Good One” is no exception. He chose the name Hawk, as he wanted something a little bit predatory, and all the Spanish inquisitors had been taken.
***
One of the toughest Listener crosswords of late was Variety Show by Enigmatist. Although Enigmatist (John Henderson) publishes lots of crosswords under a variety of pseudonyms, this was only his second Listener, the first being in 1993. I spent a few days solving some tough clues and gradually I made out the partial names of the members of the Spice Girls. The final solution was a representation of the group’s first album cover. What a fantastic puzzle! However, I felt a bit cheated that most of the answers to those tough clues had to be erased.

Alan Connor, in his Guardian blog, also describes how he solved Variety Show.
https://www.theguardian.com/crosswords/crossword-blog/2021/oct/11/crossword-blog-a-really-really-hard-puzzle-enigmatist

On Listen with Others you can read how Enigmatist came up with the idea and how Dave Hennings and Shirley Curran went about solving it.
https://listenwithothers.com/
***
This month sees the publication of the latest edition of Bradford's Crossword Solver's Dictionary. This hardback edition is available at Amazon at £20 (RRP £25).
***
The history of GCHQ, Behind the Enigma, is now available in paperback. It is the authorised history by John Ferris detailing Britain’s cyber-intelligence agency and its code-breaking achievements.
***
On our message board Phil Lloyd has announced this.

Now that social activities are becoming more of the norm again, and that many of our number will have been double- or triple-jabbed, it has been decided to cautiously resume our quarterly Listener gatherings at the Sir John Oldcastle in Farringdon, on Saturday 30th October. This Wetherspoons pub is at the junction of Farringdon Road and Greville Street, and a short walk from Farringdon Station, west along Cowcross Street.

On the same weekend there will be John Henderson’s meet in York. More info on https://www.fifteensquared.net/
***
On the Clue-writing Competition your challenge for OCTOBER is a STANDARD CRYPTIC clue to YO-YO (2-2) by the closing date of MIDNIGHT BST SATURDAY 30th OCTOBER.
http://www.andlit.org.uk/cccwc/main.php

In last month’s competition, a clue to BIBLIOMANIA, the winner was John Tozer, with this clue.

What draws crowds to the bookshop? A Miliband bio oddly – Ed’s latest is out

In a very close second place was Robert Vere with this clue.

I am in Bilbao madly collecting books
***

Best wishes
Derek

Sunday, 10 October 2021

Solution to Juggling Jellyfish by Chiffchaff

 Juggling Jellyfish by Chiffchaff - Solution

Juggling Jellyfish celebrates INTERNATIONAL TALK LIKE A PIRATE DAY given by extra letters in 31 clues. First letters of extra words in seven other clues give HAT and SHIP. PUGWASH replaces captain in the completed grid and his hat is drawn in the space occupied by cap and he is shown standing on his ship, cryptically represented by a drawing of a black pig in the space occupied by pig. Juggling Jellyfish is something we felt Pugwash ought to have said but didn’t, but he did utter the other phrases given by the puzzle.


Saturday, 25 September 2021

Crossword Centre Prize Puzzle October 2021

 Masterpiece by Craft


This puzzle celebrates a 1967 work.
The five symmetrically-placed unclued entries reveal the location of the work, and the creator.
When filled, the grid must be shaded using two appropriate colours.
The name of the work should be written below the grid.

All entries are in Chambers 2014 (electronic version)

Across
8  Some sugar, coated with a bow (4)
9  Teetotallers guzzling two pints?  That's water (4)
10  Curse flipping hilltop (3)
12  Request edges without edges? (5)
13  Bestows Greece to workers (6)
15  Calm romantic song; take no notice (6)
16  Fashionable people wearing Ellis' shell suit (5)
17  Supporters regularly take byroads (4)
18  Family of flyers in US tread carelessly (9)
23  Neck back an aperitif, if somewhat partial (4)
25  Setter dropping newspaper, going round bend (3)
27  What could be maturer way to correct mistake (7)
28  Inventor taking note for Introduction to Sexual Reproduction (7)
29  Criminal oaf is lost in Missouri (7)
30  Changed title of servant in Bambi's Return (7)
31  Sturgeon, perhaps, or Brown, manoeuvring to the left (3)
33  Plan prime locations of ridgeway (4)
34  Building sides around threadbare lawn, line with hardly any grass (9)
36  Scoundrel's qualifications short and informal, in retrospect (4)
38  Old man frequently needs glasses (5)
41  Transport oil by river, secure with navy on board (6)
43  Christian consumed by seat of learning (6)
44  Ignorant man, to whatever extent, grasses (5)
46  That lady is undressed, doorkeeper (3)
47  Essential part of apparatus when catching fish! (4)
48  Care about maple tree (4)

Down
1  Jewellery, perhaps right on end of limb? (6)
2  Mount an animal, after ascension of sun-god (6)
3  Order members having old names (5)
4  Cat adopted by witness upset hams (6)
5  Sailor heads to the Amazonian rainforest (3)
6  Dutch queen upended chaperone (6)
7  Islanders announced Egyptian king with proficiency (7)
11  Swamp anyone, to a degree? (5)
14  Fox crossworder at last, entering final and initial letters (5)
19  Fraudster taking time to replace church cloth (8)
20  Aide prepared parting, comb in position (7)
22  Gig in Wembley, say, censoring essentially bad material (8)
24  Dismissed batsmen bother to perform better, with Craft? (7)
32  Coarse seaweed overwhelming with rustic aftertaste (5)
34  “Delta is in Paris”; acceptable to any local? (7)
35  Old Peruvians wearing twisted bag (5)
37  Chief accountant felt pity and sent telegram (6)
38  Small ensign encircles the Spanish (6)
39  One of two accompanying the queen, switching partner? (6)
40  Headless fellow in midair is frightening to locals (6)
42  Compete with both sides over four acres (5)
45  Salad ingredients, in the style of Dijonnaise? (3, two words)

To enter this competition, send your entry as an image or in list format including the title of the work  to ccpuzzles@talktalk.net before 8th November 2021. The first correct entry drawn from the hat will receive a book from the Chambers range, which has been donated by Chambers.


Friday, 17 September 2021

Crossword News September 2021

 

Crossword News September 2021

The August Prize Puzzle was Diet by Curmudgeon. This was based on the film, Blade Runner, and Roy Batty’s famous final speech had to be highlighted diagonally in the grid. His final words were “Time to Die”, referenced in the title. One thing that we did not notice was that the speech was one letter short. Sorry about that.

Here are some of the comments from solvers.

While I have never seen the film, (it has been on my to-see list for a while), I did know the character and quote beforehand, which was in turn helpful in figuring out some of the extra letters. After that, the shading was not a problem. To fit that much hidden material into the grid was fantastic.  Thanks to Curmudgeon for the challenge.

Having never seen Blade Runner, and so never heard of Roy Batty, as the message began to emerge from the clues, I briefly thought we were looking for some royal battle or other. Eventually our old friend Google came to the rescue, so thanks to Curmudgeon for helping fill a gap in my education.

An excellent puzzle.

Wonderful puzzle, and excellent grid construction, I just marvel at the skill involved in that, getting so many thematic letters seeded.  I was initially surprised that the grid did not have rotational symmetry, but later could appreciate why, given the limitations imposed by thematic material.  This puzzle kept its secrets well hidden, managed to find the theme only at the very end, the end-game was truly an end-game. It appears that there could be 3 possibilities for the cell containing 2 letters, I chose one using a certain rationale, but am not sure if there's some other logic involved that's escaped me.  Nice workout, thanks.

There were 54 entries, of which 7 were marked incorrect. Our marker assures me that any solution of the missing letter were marked correct. The lucky winner , picked form the electronic hat was Pam Dudgeon, from Saxmundham, who will be receiving a prize of a copy of Chambers Crossword Dictionary next month.

A full solution is available at https://crosswordcentre.blogspot.com/2021/09/solution-to-diet-by-curmudgeon.html

You still have time to email a solution to this month’s challenge, Juggling Jellyfish by Chiffchaff.

The October Prize Puzzle will be Masterpiece by Craft. Craft is one of the many new pseudonyms that have emerged during the lockdown period.  After learning to solve cryptics as a teenager, from a thick book of Telegraph puzzles, Craft quickly progressed to advanced cryptics, and has been a keen solver for over 20 years.  Recent developments have given Craft the opportunity to "turn gamekeeper" and put into practice the ideas collected over those years.

This is Craft's first puzzle on crossword.org.uk, and eagle-eyed solvers may have spotted a similar debut in the September Magpie.  Craft would very much welcome feedback on either of these debuts.

Outside the grid, Craft is a parent to two young children and now lives in Wimbledon, having grown up in Cheshire.
***
I have followed with interest the huge success of Cracking the Cryptic, the YouTube channel run by Mark Goodliffe and Simon Anthony. They started by tackling cryptic crosswords but gained most of their following by solving sudokus. Now Simon, an accomplished gamer, has started to tackle the puzzle-solving video game the Witness.
https://www.rockpapershotgun.com/these-sudoku-youtubers-are-about-to-become-your-favourite-game-streamers
***

It is interesting to note that Mark Goodliffe has been recorded in the Urban Dictionary with the verb ‘to goodliffe’.

Goodliffe (verb) the act of pencil marking all possible candidates in all cells of a sudoku before solving

I've run out of logical steps, so I'm going to goodliffe this sudoku, and hope to spot some patterns.

https://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=goodliffe
***
The results of the Azed Annual Honours List have been announced. Congratulations to Richard Heald for winning in a close-run competition. Richard ended up with 14 points, including two second places. In second place with 12 points were M Barley, Dr S J Shaw and R C Teuton.
http://www.andlit.org.uk/azed/ann_hons_table.php?year=2020
***
On our CC Clue-Writing Competition the results of the July challenge, a clue to MACARONI, are out now. The winner was Joe Rees with this cue.

Tuck, Marian and co made merry (8)

In third place was Simon Griew with this clue.
Micra on rank accepts a fare in Rome

By a remarkable coincidence, Simon followed a link to Ximenes’s MACARONI competition in June 1957. There, also in 3rd place, was his father, E J Griew. This was a very touching coincidence for Simon, whose father died 25 years ago. In 1957 he would have been only 26.
http://www.andlit.org.uk/azed/cluelist.php?series=X&comp_no=438

Your challenge for SEPTEMBER is a STANDARD CRYPTIC clue to CICERONE (8) by the closing date of MIDNIGHT BST WEDNESDAY 29th SEPTEMBER.
http://www.andlit.org.uk/cccwc/main.php
***
It is looking increasingly likely that there will be a York S & B meeting next month. John Henderson has pencilled in the 29th and 30th October and is looking to see how many people would come. You can find much more information at this link http://www.fifteensquared.net/2021/08/24/sb-york-2021-friday-29th-and-saturday-30th-october-2021/
***
Alan Connor has interviewed the prolific setter Phi this month and it is very interesting. Phi, of course, is Paul Henderson, who had a puzzle on the Crossword Centre this year and has a record of over 1500 published cryptic crosswords. I first met him 20 years ago at the 2001 Listener/Azed Dinner. You might like to compare his photo http://www.crossword.org.uk/dinner.htm
***
I always enjoy solving the Sunday Times cryptic crosswords with their team of setters, each with a different style. In fact, I have won 3 gold pens in the past 5 years from the crosswords. Crossword editor, Peter Biddlecombe, has produced a new collection which was published at the beginning of this month. The Sunday Times Cryptic Crossword Book 1 is a collection of 100 cryptic crosswords, at a bargain price of £6.99.
***
On Twitter, Daniel Peake, master quizzer and question writer for Only Connect, announced that he will soon be working as Assistant Puzzles Editor for The Telegraph.

Best wishes
Derek

Thursday, 9 September 2021

Solution to Diet by Curmudgeon

 Diet by Curmudgeon - Solution


TIME TO DIE

Solvers were required SHADE ROY BATTY'S WORDS AND FILM TITLE: ADD HIS LAST WORDS BELOW

Apologies for the faulty quote in the grid.

Across: 1 Salaam, 5 Atlases, 13 Leo III, 14 Airshows, 16 Lie on, 18 Tuis, 19 A hoot, 20 Erne, 22 Tav, 23 Newies, 25 Reed, 26 Sae, 28 Motor areas, 33 Casas, 35 Exult, 36 Obi, 37 Up to, 38 Bean, 39 Allele, 41 Unbind, 45 Euge, 46 Bilinear, 47 Try, 48 Solders, 49 Keshes.

Down: 1 Sea rats, 2 Alit, 3 Alsoon, 4 Moose, 6 Tisane, 7 Lilt, 8 Abitur, 9 Smeuse, 10 Ego, 11 Sensed, 12 Groove, 15 Hate, 17 Ariosto, 21 Sea tangle, 24 Saxonite, 27 Amble, 28 Mao, 29 Taperer, 30 Rubbers, 31 Sanders, 32 Coarbs, 34 Sulk, 40 Loll, 42 Bid, 43 Mas, 44 Irk.

Across: 1 S: MA[S] ALAS<, 5 H: AT LAS[H]ES, 13 A: IDEALIS[A]TION* less STAND*, 14 D: AIRS [D]HOWS, 16 E: LIE ON[E], 18 R: TU[R]I(n) + S, 19 O: A(p)[O](s)H(c)O(p)O(u)T, 20 Y: EARNESTL[Y]* less LAST*, 22 B: TA[B] + V(erdicts), 23 A: NE W(orking) IE [A]S, 25 T: [T]REED, 26 T: SA[T]E, 28 Y: M(anaged) O T OR AR(e) EAS[Y], 33 S: CAS[S]IAS less I, 35 W: Hidden reversed (fia)T LUX [W]E(sleyans), 36 O: O BI[O], 37 R: UP + [R]OT<, 38 D: BEN[D] around A, 39 S: ALL EL[S]E, 41 A: UN BIN [A]D, 45 N: DE[N]GUE< less D(anger), 46 D: [D]ELIBERATING* less GET*, 47 F: T(o) [F]RY, 48 I: SOLD[I]ERS, 49 L: SHEKE[L]S*.

Down: 1 M: SEATS around RA[M], 2 T: A[T] + first letters L I T, 3 I: ALSO O(n)[I](O)N(s), 4 T: MOO[T] SE, 6 L: A[L]E ISNT*, 7 E: LIT around L[E], 8 A: AUR[A] around BIT, 9 D: S MUSE[D] around E, 10 D: E GO[D], 11 H: Hidden (ari)SEN S[H]ED(evil), 12 I: G[I]RO + OVE(r), 15 S: HA[S]TE, 17 L: {RIA[L]TO SO}*, 21 A: SEA G[A]LE around TAN, 24 S: SAXON [S]ITE, 27 T: A(sk) MB LE[T], 28 W: [W]OMA(n), 29 O: {A E P[O]RTER}*, 30 R: RU BB ER[R]S, 31 D: SS around [D]ANDER, 32 S: CO + BRAS[S]*, 34 B: S [B]ULK, 40 E: LOL around [E]L, 42 L: BUI[L]D less U, 43 O: M[O]AS, 44 W: [W]ORK with (to)I(ls) for O. 



Sunday, 29 August 2021

Crossword Centre Prize Puzzle September 2021

 Juggling Jellyfish by Chiffchaff

There is an extra letter in 31 clues to be removed before solving which, when read in clue order, give a cause for celebration by, amongst others, a character whose name must replace an entry in the completed grid. Six clues consist of wordplay only and together with their corresponding grid entry (to be deduced) make phrases this character has been known to say. The remaining seven clues have a word to be removed before solving, the first letter of which, when read in clue order, spells out two objects to be illustrated; one thematically and one cryptically; each replacing the contents of three cells in the final grid which hint at what to draw. Numbers in brackets refer to grid entries. Chambers Dictionary (2016) is recommended, but does not contain one thematic answer.

Across
    1    Trawler’s first to rig net at sea (7)
    6    Slower new Sierra blocking Buick? (6)
    10    Mutinous cabin boy’s Leander’s dropped for Old Empire (4)
    11    Wanton caress is entertaining finale for such as Bee and Katy (9)
    12    Weary retirees reading from Bible (3)
    13    Wild pike crossing waves (8)
    15    Upset Hook trailing Black and Tan (4)
    16    Most like coral island held by Jake’s final duo in setback (7)
    17    Commission uncovered Henry with smuggled diamonds (6)
    18    “Silver, Silver” from the right in Barmy Army (4)
    20    Orcas flipped over half-destroyed pedalo and scratched rustic (8)
    22    They conceal communist revolutionary in this (6)
    24    Mouth organ backing tenor (4)
    25    American sailor returning Tupi’s call (3)
    27    A lot of hoo-ha over iron collar (8)
    29    Head of Training Board’s to augment college (4)
    31    Short span avoiding what’s hottest and coldest (6)
    32    Lava engulfing big house in Indian pass (7)
    35    Lend one’s home to American (4)
    36    Jonah’s tending border: heads to put in geraniums for prickly customer (8)
    37    Blistering barnacles! That could be scarab this girl originally lost (3)
    38    Flies south to deliver ale intercepted by agents (9)
    39    Knight foregoing hooping old Bacchanal cry (4)
    40    Helmsman initially replacing front of steering apparatus in squall (6)
    41    Flying dustman regularly caught nail (7)
Down
    1    Tie for drawling, flipping German with limp covering up Jewish title (11, two words)
    2    Nude maid on river bank shows bottom (9)
    3    Tonks naughty searat pinching recipe for dressings (8)
    4    Non-professional’s one that swims without ceasing (4)
    5    No limits specified to salvage couple of doubloons in old tin (6)
    6    One to remove palace Queen with no sex appeal (7)
    7    Space on endless Scottish island for Will to raise pup (5)
    8    Marine creature calm when hot sun rises? Arrr – not half! (6, two words)
    9    Third pair of stories about British warships makes money for poet (4)
    14    Scaffolding securing tent (11)
     16    Master cut-throat on vacation swallowing a prawn – Kidd’s own (7)
    19    SS Argo almost spun aground in scene of panic? (9)
    21    Went and spilt rum just made in Edinburgh (8)
    23    Wrongly erases pi in Graeco-Egyptian god’s name (7)
    26    Impotent king quitting traditional idyllic Greek setting for Canada’s Atlantic provinces (6)
    28    Lively Italian danced around Lake India, a natural reservoir in Oz (6)
    30    Oaf leaving broken locker for secretary (5)
    33    Occasionally checked pictures husband put up in Scotland: “Well!”  (4)
    34    Stakes protecting early root (4)

 To enter this competition, send your entry as an image or in list format describing the completed grid  to ccpuzzles@talktalk.net before 8th October 2021. The first correct entry drawn from the hat will receive a book from the Chambers range, which has been donated by Chambers.