| BOOKTOKEN | Gift that the recipient can exchange for a novel (4,5) |
| INFLUENCE | ___, n. In politics, a visionary quo given in exchange for a substantial quid. |
| COINTREAU | Piece of money a true exchange for a liqueur (9) |
| AFORESAID | Ideas for a novel previously referred to |
| DEDICATEE | The recipient of a specific tribute |
| SNAREDRUM | The recipient of regular beating is to crack, shortly, returning to kill |
| TENS | You can exchange a $20 bill for a pair of them |
| BONKBUSTER | Since the 1980s, a term for a novel like Jilly Cooper's Riders |
| BRIDGEOFSPIES | 2015 film starring Tom Hanks which is about a lawyer who negotiates the release of a U.S. pilot in exchange for a Soviet KGB agent: 3 wds. |
| CHATROOM | General word for a virtual hangout in cyberspace, where users can exchange messages in real time (4,4) |
| ENCASH | Adaptable, she can exchange cheque for coins? |
| RIALTO | Channel you can exchange at the mart (6) |
| TRISTRAMSHANDY | Isn't Mrs T. Hardy a model for a novel? (8,6) |
| ATOWNLIKEALICE | For a novel, I know a tale stupidly followed by suckers |
| GILLERPRIZE | Literary award for a novel or short story in English by a Canadian author |
| MASK | The true contents of hand-written letters can be hidden through the use of this method, which require the recipient to place a shaped template over the letter. |
| MAGICBEANS | What Jack got in exchange for a cow, in a children's story |
| REATA | A rate of exchange for a lariat (5) |
| RABIES | Rubies you exchange for a disease, from a dog (6) |
| STORKMARKETS | Places where tall, gangly birds can exchange shares? |