| Screenwriter for "The African Queen" | 46 |
| Pulitzer-winner James | 21 |
| Pulitzer winner: 1958 | 21 |
| Pulitzer Prize–winning author: 1958 | 42 |
| Pulitzer Prize-winning author James | 35 |
| Pulitzer Prize winner: 1958 | 27 |
| Pulitzer Prize novelst | 22 |
| Pulitzer Prize novelist (1958) | 30 |
| Pulitzer novelist | 17 |
| Pulitzer fiction winner, 1958 | 29 |
| Pulitzer author of 1958 | 23 |
| Pulitizer Prize author James | 28 |
| Prize-winning U.S. author | 25 |
| Posthumous Pulitzer winner | 26 |
| Posthumous Pulitzer Prize winner James | 38 |
| Posthumous 1958 Pulitzer-winning author (h) | 43 |
| Poet and novelist James | 23 |
| Philip with a 1975 best seller on C.I.A. secrets | 48 |
| Philip who wrote a 1975 C.I.A. exposé | 40 |
| Palindromist Jon | 16 |
| Only outfielder besides Winfield to win Gold Gloves in both leagues in the 1900s | 80 |
| Onetime Mets slugger Tommie | 27 |
| Onetime Met Tommie | 18 |
| Onetime film critic for "The Nation" | 46 |
| One-time Time critic James | 26 |
| One of the "Amazin' Mets" | 39 |
| One of Hodges' stars in 1969 | 32 |
| Novelist-critic James | 21 |
| Novelist James | 14 |
| Noted writer: 1909–55 | 28 |
| Noted 1940's film critic | 28 |
| Notable movie maven | 19 |
| N.L. outfielder who won a Gold Glove in 1970 along with Clemente and Rose | 73 |
| Movie critic James | 18 |
| Monetary exchange fee | 21 |
| Miracle Mets' Tommie | 24 |
| Miracle Mets star | 17 |
| Miracle Mets outfielder Tommie | 30 |
| Miracle Mets outfielder | 23 |
| Miracle Mets member Tommie | 26 |
| Miracle Mets lead-off man | 25 |
| Miracle Met Tommie | 18 |
| Met outfielder | 14 |
| Met man | 7 |
| Memorable New York Met Tommie | 29 |
| Memorable film critic | 21 |
| Member of the New York Mets Hall of Fame | 40 |
| Member of the Miracle Mets | 26 |
| James with the ironically titled "Let Us Now Praise Famous Men" | 73 |
| James with a Pulitzer | 21 |
| James who died three years before winning a Pulitzer | 52 |
| James who created filmdom's Charlie Allnut and Rose Sayer | 61 |
| James who coscripted "The African Queen" | 50 |
| James who co-wrote "The African Queen" | 48 |
| James or Tommy | 14 |
| James of letters | 16 |
| James of criticism | 18 |
| James ___, U.S. author | 22 |
| Humorist/illustrator Jon | 24 |
| He wrote the screenplay for "The African Queen" | 57 |
| He wrote "The Morning Watch": 1954 | 44 |
| He wrote "The Morning Watch": 1951 | 44 |
| He wrote "A Death in the Family" | 42 |
| Former teammate of Cleon Jones | 30 |
| Former Mets outfielder Tommie | 29 |
| Former Met | 10 |
| Former CIA agent Philip who wrote the 1987 memoir "On the Run" | 72 |
| Former ''Time'' film critic | 43 |
| First of three Mets to hit a lead-off home run in a World Series Game 3 (he did it in '69, Garrett in '73, and Dykstra in '86) | 138 |
| First Met to win a Gold Glove | 29 |
| First African-American to win a Gold Glove in both leagues | 58 |
| FATHER of one of David's mighty men | 39 |
| Father Flye's famous correspondent | 38 |
| Essayist/novelist James | 23 |
| Depression-era writer James | 27 |
| Crooked, in Yorkshire | 21 |
| Contemporary author-illustrator Jon | 35 |
| Cockeyed, in Cornwall | 21 |
| Co-screenwriter of "The African Queen" | 48 |
| Children's book author Jon | 30 |
| Carew's predecessor as A.L. Rookie of the Year | 50 |
| Carew followed him as A.L. Rookie of the Year | 45 |
| C.I.A. profiler Philip | 22 |
| Business exec William | 21 |
| Awry, in Yorkshire | 18 |
| Author-scenarist James ___ | 26 |
| Author-movie critic James | 25 |
| Author-film critic: 1909–55 | 34 |
| Author who won a posthumous Pulitzer in 1958 | 44 |
| Author who won a posthumous Pulitzer | 36 |
| Author of "Permit Me Voyage" | 38 |
| Author of "Let Us Now Praise Famous Men" | 50 |
| Author James or outfielder Tommie | 33 |
| Author James ___: 1909-55 | 25 |
| Author and screenwriter James | 29 |
| Atilt | 5 |
| Askew: Scots | 12 |
| Askew, in Yorkshire | 19 |
| American novelist?film critic | 29 |
| A Met star in 1969 | 18 |