The Crossword Centre Clue-Writing Competition

CCCWC October competition voters’ comments
 
Clue no. 12: Bone likely in kipper

Back to competitor’s clues  |   All the comments  |   Other competitions

A clue to CAPTURE.
3 comments refer to this clue (from 3 competitors, 0 others)
Move your mouse pointer over any bold clue number to see the clue.

Here is the text

 
Comments on the competition
1.
I thought this was an excellent set of clues, by far the strongest that I remember in this competition. After my first run through, I had at least 15 candidates for votes, which made the task of awarding votes (pleasantly) demanding.

Ultimately, I gave 5 points to 40, which is as good an &lit. as I've seen; 4 points to 12, for a perfect and succinct surface; 3 points to 5, an excellent clue which is, to my mind, slightly outshone by 40; 2 points to 26, another with an excellent, tight surface; and 1 point to 51, which is pleasingly original.
2.
With so many entries it's not surprising to see some very similar ideas, for example 18 and 40, 43 and 47, 44 and 59. 24 and 37 rely on practically identical but dubious homophones. Several clues don't read very naturally, e.g 11 13 17 20 32 33 34 42 53. I don't see how "screen" works as a definition in58. Dr.Edwards is supefluous in 22. Vacuum = capture dust in 23 is tenuous to say the least. 14 is probably the most inventive clue but since a capon is not necessarily a turkey I ruled it out, sorry. (Chambers simply has "a castrated cock".) Some excellent pithy clues – 5 stands out, and 26 is very elegantly constructed. I also rather like 2, 10 12 18 and 40. Perhaps surprisingly, no references to the Tea Party.
3.
This competition was notable for the extraordinary variety of single-word definitions offered for “capture”. Quite a few of these struck me as definitely inadequate: eg, picture, detention, control, vacuum, even (apparently) escape. Words like hook, land, beach and trap signify specific ways of capturing something, but, at least without a “for instance” or equivalent, are, it seems to me, inaccurate as synonyms for capture. Which is a particular shame in the cases of 29, 30 – a lovely allusion to the Mad Hatter’s tea-party – and 31, all otherwise very good clues. Similarly, something appropriated is not necessarily, or even typically, captured, spoiling 59, an otherwise good clue. I was surprised to find that Chambers gives “arrest” as one of the definitions of capture and find it hard to credit that “arrest” in the sense of “apprehend or take into custody by legal authority” is what is meant. Only in a minority of very specific circumstances would it be at all natural to talk about the police capturing a suspected criminal. However, in view of the Chambers entry, it seemed a bit unfair not to give cop, collar, bust, nick and pinch (and indeed the &lit at 40) the benefit of the doubt . 8 and 32 were examples of invalid indicators of first letters: “starts treading” surely cannot indicate the first letter of “treading” – which requires something like “start of treading” or “how treading starts” – while “Premier’s” cannot conceivably mean “premiers of”.

5 points:
12 – delightfully succinct, with an excellent and (quite fairly) misleading surface.

2 points each:
18 – a neat clue
40 – a question-mark would have improved it

1 point each:
21 – a slightly improbable surface
41 – though the “in”, where “of” is really required, is a shade clumsy
49 – straightforward and rather easy to solve, but a pleasing image
55 – a nice anagram and surface, but, even with a question-mark, the definition is pushing it a bit.

0.5 point each:
10 – a question-mark to indicate that smoking is only one means of curing would have been an improvement
15 – surface spoiled by extreme improbability of a rook’s taking a queen in the opening of a chess game
39 – wrongful is on the borderline as an a.i.
48 – quite a nice surface, but “restore” for “cure” is a shade iffy