| BEETON | Isabella, 19th Century London-born author of a famous Book of Household Management (6) |
| NOSTRADAMUS | 16th-Century French physician and astrologer, author of a famous book of prophecies (11) |
| CROMPTON | Lancashire-born author of a series of books for children based on mischievous schoolboy William Brown and his band of outlaws (8) |
| MOBY | First word of a famous book about the sea |
| LEQUEUX | William ___, London-born author of novels The House of Whispers and The Four Faces (2,5) |
| ANAT | Subj. Henry Gray wrote a famous book about |
| RIPPER | Thriller set in 19th century London (------ Street) |
| GASLIT | Like 19th-century London streets |
| MRSBEETON | Victorian English writer famous for her book of household management (3,6) |
| MOHOCK | Aristocratic ruffian of early 18th century London (6) |
| BLANCMANGE | Old fashioned jelly-like pudding with a recipe in Mrs. Beeton's Book of Household Management (10) |
| MENAGE | Fellows mature in household management (6) |
| MOHAWK | Indian ruffian in eighteenth-century London (6) |
| UTENSILS | Kitchenalia with Victorian forms illustrated in Mrs Beeton's Book of Household Management (8) |
| MILL | John Stuart ___, 19th-century London-born philosopher (4) |
| UTOPIA | Sir Thomas More's famous book |
| BOWSTREETRUNNER | Nickname for a 19th-century London policeman (3,6,6) |
| BRICK | An adobe or clinker of clay, such as any one of the flettons forming much of 20th-century London; or, a Delft vase, loaf of bread, old-fashioned mobile phone, piece of Lego or wooden toy block, thus s |
| ROGET | Peter Mark ___ (1779-1869), author of a famous thesaurus (5) |
| NEWGATE | 19th-century London prison |