| RACKHAM | Artist noted for illustrations of Grimm's fairy tales and stories by Kenneth Grahame and J. M. Barrie (7) |
| BADGERS | Woodland animals living in setts, anthropomorphised in stories by Kenneth Grahame and Colin Dann (7) |
| BLAKE | Artist noted for illustrations of Roald Dahl's characters including the BFG, the Twits and Muggle-Wump (5) |
| ELVES | The - and the Shoemaker ; story in the Ladybird Books series adapted from one of Grimms' Fairy Tales (5) |
| SKETCHBOOK | The - - of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent; collection of essays and stories by Washington Irving (10) |
| HEDGE | Brambly -; series of illustrated books and stories by Jill Barklem (5) |
| ADAIR | Gilbert who wrote 1980s sequels to the works of Lewis Carroll and J.M. Barrie |
| BALLANTYNE | Author of some 100 adventure novels including The Coral Island, a book said to have inspired Robert Louis Stevenson and J. M. Barrie (10) |
| SCOTTISH | Like Robert Louis Stevenson and J.M. Barrie |
| CREWELS | Broadcast of Grimm's yarns (7) |
| DORE | Artist noted for illustrations in classics by Dante, Cervantes, Rabelais, La Fontaine and Milton as well as works by many of his contemporaries (4) |
| HANSELANDGRETEL | Grimm's fairy tale and title of a Humperdinck opera (often seen with "und" instead of "and") |
| THEROBBERBRIDEGROOM | Grimm's fairy tale and title of a book by Eudora Welty (and later made into a musical) |
| BRETT | Artist noted for illustrations such as The Flower Ballet, Pixie Circus, Twilight Dance, Goodnight Time and Fairy Time (5) |
| IRONJOHN | Grimm's fairy tale and title of a book by Robert Bly (subtitled A Book About Men) |
| EDWARDS | Equine artist noted for illustrations in Country Life, Muriel Wace's Moorland Mousie and Anna Sewell's Black Beauty (7) |
| SNOWWHITE | Grimm's fairy tale and basis for the 2012 film Mirror, Mirror |
| LITTLEREDRIDINGHOOD | Grimm's fairy tale and a main character in the musical Into the Woods |
| RUMPELSTILTSKIN | Grimm's fairy tale and main villain in the movie Shrek Forever After |
| ORAL | The type of sources that provided most of the Grimms' fairy tales, though some were from print (4) |