
| Self-reliant essayist that advised attaching wagons to celestial bodies | (5, 7) |
| Person who was the first to transport silk commercially – at least by air | (6, 8) |
| Actress who knows what you five did last summer | (8, 6) |
| Despite his name, this author does not make barrels; likewise, his most famous character isn't a particularly sharp dresser | (5, 6) |
| The creator of Macondo (a district of Colombia) | (7, 7) |
| Singer who is fond of telling people she hopes they dance, including George W. Bush and Nobel Peace laureates | (3, 6) |
| She encourages you to get physical – at least, if you're the one that she wants | (6, 4) |
| He plays The Doctor opposite Christopher Eccelston; his version is decidedly more serpentine than Mr. Eccelston's, though | (6, 6) |
| Though she wrote about good wives and old-fashioned girls, this author was a feminist who took her pen name from a prominent women's college | (6, 6) |
| He was the first American to have an element named after him, and also lent his name to two national labs | (6, 8) |
| She got her start as Annie, but her breakout role was opposite Zorro | (9, 5) |
| This wizardly inventor had the bright idea to nickname his first child "Dot" and his second child "Dash" | (6, 6) |
| Despite being an American, he wrote mainly of nobility: red princesses and a jungle lord | (5, 9) |
| If you were a teen in the 90s, you may have found it an improvement to deck your home's walls with this heart-throb's poster | (8, 6) |