| Fictional work that eschews literary conventions |
| A literary device for saying almost everything about almost anything": Huxley |
| Young ___ (literary category) |
| Literary heptad |
| A literary Lamb |
| Whaler sailor |
| Algonquin's literary luncheon club |
| Literary giant from Concord, Mass. |
| Home of a literary ghost |
| À la the founder of literary naturalism |
| A literary Bell |
| Enduring literary works |
| Enduring literary work |
| Famous whaler |
| Literary title character with a palindromic name |
| Melville's whaler |
| A literary incongruity |
| A literary pseudonym |
| Literary representatives |
| Surname of literary characters Noah, Tom, Al, Rosasharn, Ruthie, and Winfield |
| An Icelandic literary work |
| Literary governess's surname |
| Obsessed whaler |
| Literary afterthought |
| Obsessed fictional whaler |
| Moby Dick" whaler |
| Whalers' meeting, in "Moby-Dick |
| Literary figure? |
| Whaler whose 1820 sinking was an inspiration for "Moby-Dick |
| An ill-defined and disreputable literary banana republic": Stephen King |