| NGUYEN | Author who wrote the 2024 memoir "A Man of Two Faces: A Memoir, a History, a Memorial" |
| BATMAN | Foe of Two-Face |
| DARIUSRUCKER | Hootie & the Blowfish lead singer who wrote the 2024 memoir Life's Too Short: 2 wds. |
| GRIFFINDUNNE | An American Werewolf in London star who wrote the 2024 memoir The Friday Afternoon Club: 2 wds. |
| SALMARUSHDIE | Booker Prize-winning novelist who wrote the 2024 memoir Knife: 2 wds. |
| ASPECT | Word for the direction a building faces; a positioning of planets; a side of a problem; or, a particular feature (6) |
| SIDE | Either of the two faces of a vinyl record; or, a region of the body between armpit and hip (4) |
| NADINE | _ Dorries, former Conservative cabinet minister and author of the 2024 memoir Downfall (6) |
| ELLA | Meet The Dog Who Saved My Life, 2024 memoir by the Princess of Wales's brother James Middleton (4) |
| PRITCHETT | Author born above a toyshop who wrote the story collection You Make Your Own Life and the memoirs A Cab at the Door and Midnight Oil (9) |
| MUIR | Denis Norden's comedy partner who wrote the What-a-Mess books for children and the memoir A Kentish Lad (4) |
| DEE | Author of the 2024 memoir What Have We Here, Billy ____ Williams |
| DANDIPRAT | A bit of history, a northern one of the original 13 being caught in blast! (9) |
| ASSART | In British legal history, a piece of forest land cleared or reclaimed for arable use; or, the act or offence of grubbing up of trees and bushes (6) |
| MAYLE | Author whose memoir A Year in Provence was adapted into a television mini-series starring John Thaw and Lindsay Duncan, and novel A Good Year into a film with Russell Crowe and Albert Finney (5) |
| NAM | Subject of the 1977 best-selling memoir "A Rumor of War," for short |
| JANUARY | With a "wolf" full moon and symbols including garnet, carnation and snowdrop, month named after a god of doorways whose two faces look to the past and the future (7) |
| ORAL | ____ history, a body of stories about past events passed on by word of mouth (4) |
| TABLEAU | Scene from history: a group of people in costumes who neither speak nor move (7) |
| GRIMBLE | Arthur ?, author of 1952 memoir A Pattern of Islands |