| FOLLETT | Ken -, author of the novels Whiteout and Jackdaws (7) |
| KENFOLLETT | Author of the novels Whiteout and World Without End (3,7) |
| KESEY | Ken -; author of the novel One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (5) |
| WEATHER | Whiteout |
| ROKKAKU | Giant bird and northern jackdaw look finally united fighting kite |
| SNOCATS | Vehicles used in whiteouts |
| KARENNI | Burmese native jackdaw seen over rising interior |
| ROOK | Bird related to crows, ravens and jackdaws; or, a chess piece in the form of a battlement (4) |
| CARRIONCROW | Bird related to the rook and jackdaw (7,4) |
| CORVIDAE | Family to which crows, rooks and jackdaws belong (8) |
| RAVEN | Known collectively as an unkindness, a buzzard-sized bird related to the crow,jackdaw, jay and rook; one of the avian guardians of the Tower Of London (5) |
| MAGPIE | One of a conventicle, gulp, mischief or tidings of corvids with alleged thieving tendencies like their relatives, the jackdaws (6) |
| SNOW | The white of a whiteout |
| CORVUS | Genus of birds including crows, jackdaws, ravens and rooks (6) |
| CROW | Any one of the con/ids or "hoodies" forming flocks known collectively as a storytelling whose relatives include the rook, raven, jackdaw, jay and magpie (4) |
| RHEIMS | The Jackdaw of - (The Ingoldsby Legends) |
| ROOKS | Birds in the crow family, often flocking with jackdaws (5) |
| JAYS | Birds related to crows, rooks, magpies, jackdaws and ravens (4) |
| OUTWIT | Whiteouts she got out of to be smarter than the rest (6) |
| CORVID | A crow or one of the distinct but closely related members of its family, such as a chough, jackdaw, jay, magpie, raven or rook (6) |