| BYRON | "Prisoner of Chillon" poet |
| HOPE | Anthony -; author of the Ruritania trilogy comprising The Prisoner of Zenda, The Heart of Princess Osra and Rupert of Hentzau (4) |
| GRIM | An omen of death in the form of a black dog in the J K Rowling novel Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban |
| ANTHONY | Author of novels The Prisoner of Zenda and Rupert of Hentzau (7,4) |
| POWER | Might of monarch supporting prisoner of war |
| RURITANIA | Fictional setting of The Prisoner of Zenda (9) |
| EZRAPOUND | Poet certified Prisoner of Zenda, up or out (4,5) |
| KINKY | Author of the novels Ten Little New Yorkers and The Prisoner Of Vandam Street (5,8) |
| FRIEDMAN | Author of the novels Ten Little New Yorkers and The Prisoner Of Vandam Street (5,8) |
| STALAG | Type of German World War II prisoner-of-war camp especially for non-commissioned officers and other |
| FERRIS | Actress in The Darling Buds of May, Rosemary & Thyme and Call the Midwife as well as Matilda, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban and Tolkien (6) |
| PENDULUM | The _ _ _ _, short story by Edgar Allan Poe about the torture of a prisoner of the Spanish Inquisition (3,3,3,8) |
| ANDTHE | The _ _ _ _, short story by Edgar Allan Poe about the torture of a prisoner of the Spanish Inquisition (3,3,3,8) |
| PIT | The _ _ _ _, short story by Edgar Allan Poe about the torture of a prisoner of the Spanish Inquisition (3,3,3,8) |
| AZKABAN | Harry Potter And The Prisoner Of _ _ _ _ _ _ _ , third in the series of fantasy novels by JK Rowling published in 1999 (7) |
| ANTHONYHOPE | Author of adventure novels including The Prisoner Of Zenda (7,4) |
| EMMATHOMPSON | Who appears as Professor Trelawney in Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban and Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix? (4,8) |
| OFLAG | Type of German prisoner-of-war camp for captured enemy officers, chiefly used during World War II (5) |
| POWDERED | Prisoner of war ordered, in absence of other ranks, to ground (8) |
| RUPERT | ___ of Hentzau, sequel to The Prisoner of Zenda by Anthony Hope published in 1898 |