List of English writers lists writers in English, born or raised in England (or who lived in England for a lengthy period), who already have Wikipedia pages. References for the information here appear on the linked Wikipedia pages. The list is incomplete – please help to expand it by adding Wikipedia page-owning writers who have written extensively in any genre or field, including science and scholarship. Please follow the entry format. A seminal work added to a writer's entry should also have a Wikipedia page. This is a subsidiary to the List of English people. There are or should be similar lists of Irish, Scots, Welsh, Manx, Jersey, and Guernsey writers.
Abbreviations: AV = Authorized King James Version of the Bible, c. = circa; century; cc. = centuries; cleric = Anglican priest, fl. = floruit = flourished, RC = Roman Catholic, SF = science fiction, YA = young adult fiction
R
- Jonathan Raban (1942–2023), travel writer
 - Michael Rabbet (c. 1562–1630), AV translator and cleric
 - Ann Radcliffe (1764–1823), novelist, The Mysteries of Udolpho
 - Jeremiah Radcliffe (died 1612 or c. 1620), scholar, AV translator and cleric
 - Dollie Radford (real name Caroline Maitland, 1858–1920), poet and writer
 - Simon Rae (living), poet and cricket writer
 - Elizabeth Raffald (1833–1881), cookery writer
 - Shahida Rahman (born 1971), writer and publisher
 - Bali Rai (born 1971), YA novelist
 - Craig Raine (born 1944) poet and critic
 - Kathleen Raine (1908–2003), poet and translator
 - Nina Raine (living), playwright and director
 - John Rainolds (1549–1607), AV translator and cleric
 - Ross Raisin (born 1979), novelist
 - Arthur Raistrick (1896–1991), polymath
 - Walter Raleigh or Ralegh (1552–1618), poet and navigator
 - Walter Raleigh (1861–1922), scholar and poet
 - Lobsang Rampa (real name Cyril Henry Hoskin, 1910–1981), novelist
 - Leonard G. G. Ramsey (1913–1990), writer, editor and encyclopaedist
 - Thomas Randolph (1605–1635), poet
 - William Brighty Rands (wrote as Henry Holbeach and Matthew Browne, 1823–1882), children's writer and hymnist
 - Charles Rangeley-Wilson (living), novelist and poet
 - Nicholas Rankin (born 1950), biographer, historian and broadcaster
 - Arthur Ransome (1884–1967), children's writer, Swallows and Amazons
 - Ellen Henrietta Ranyard (1810–1879), religious writer
 - Hastings Rashdall (1858–1924), philosopher and cleric
 - John Rastell or Rastall (c. 1475–1536) chronicler and playwright
 - Julian Rathbone (1935–2008), novelist
 - Terence Rattigan (1911–1977), playwright and screenwriter The Winslow Boy
 - Simon Raven (1927–2001), novelist, screenwriter and playwright
 - Ralph Ravens (c. 1553–1615), scholar, AV translator and cleric
 - Edward Ravenscroft (c. 1654–1707), playwright
 - Gwen Raverat (1885–1957), memoirist and illustrator
 - Thomas Ravis (c. 1560–1609), scholar, AV translator and bishop
 - George Rawlinson (1812–1902), scholar, historian and cleric
 - Hardwicke Rawnsley (1851–1920), poet and hymnist
 - Tom Raworth (1938–2017), poet
 - John Ray (1627–1705), naturalist and lexicographer
 - Derek Raymond (real name R. W. A. Cook, 1931–1994), novelist
 - Claire Rayner (1931–2010), novelist and broadcaster
 - Jay Rayner (born 1966), novelist and food writer
 - Shoo Rayner (originally Hugh Rayner, 1956), children's writer and illustrator
 - Benedict Read (1945–2016), art critic
 - Herbert Read (1893–1968), poet, critic and novelist
 - Miss Read (real name Dora Jessie Saint, 1913–2012), novelist, autobiographer and children's writer
 - Piers Paul Read (born 1941), novelist and writer
 - Charles Reade (1814–1884), novelist, The Cloister and the Hearth
 - Hazel Alden Reason (1901–1976), writer on science for children
 - John Redford (died 1547), poet, playwright and composer
 - Peter Redgrove (1932–2003), poet, novelist and editor
 - Patrick Redmond (born 1966), thriller writer
 - Henry Reed (1914–1986), poet and translator
 - Isaac Reed (1742–1807), biographer and Shakespearean
 - Jeremy Reed (born 1951), poet, novelist and critic
 - Talbot Baines Reed (1852–1893), children's novelist
 - Douglas Reeman (wrote as Alexander Kent, 1924–2017), novelist
 - David Rees (1936–1993), children's writer
 - Terence Reese (1913–1996), bridge writer
 - Clara Reeve (1729–1807), novelist, The Old English Baron
 - John Reeve (1608–1658), religious writer
 - Philip Reeve (born 1966), children's writer and illustrator
 - Amber Reeves (1887–1981), novelist and writer
 - James Reeves (originally John Morris Reeves, 1909–1978), poet and children's writer
 - Christopher Reid (born 1949), poet and essayist
 - Jonathan Rendall (born 1964), novelist
 - Ruth Rendell (also as Barbara Vine, 1930–2015), novelist
 - Louise Rennison (1951–2016), children's writer and comic
 - John Reresby (1634–1689), politician and diarist
 - Frederic Reynolds (1764–1841), playwright
 - George W. M. Reynolds (1814–1879, novelist and journalist
 - Henry Reynolds (1564–1632), poet, translator and critic
 - John Hamilton Reynolds (1794–1852), poet
 - Dan Rhodes (born 1972), novelist and story writer
 - Pam Rhodes (born 1950), novelist and broadcaster
 - William Barnes Rhodes (1772–1826), playwright
 - Ernest Rhys (1859–1946), writer, poet and editor
 - David Ricardo (1772–1823), political economist
 - Ben Rice (born 1972), novelist
 - James Rice (1843–1882), novelist
 - Barnabe Rich (c. 1540–1617), writer and soldier
 - Alfred Bate Richards (1820–1876), playwright, poet and essayist
 - I. A. Richards (1893–1979), critic
 - Justin Richards (born 1961), novelist
 - Vernon Richards (originally Vero Recchioni, 1915–2001), anarchist writer
 - Dorothy Richardson (1873–1957), novelist and translator
 - Elizabeth Richardson (1576/1577–1651), religious writer
 - John Richardson (died 1625), scholar, AV translator and cleric
 - John Richardson (1657–1753), Quaker preacher and memoirist
 - Samuel Richardson (1689–1761), novelist, Pamela
 - Christopher Ricks (born 1933), critic and anthologist
 - Edgell Rickword (1898–1982), poet, critic and editor
 - Anne Ridler (1912–2001), poet and editor
 - James Ridley (wrote as Charles Morell, 1736–1765), novelist and story writer
 - Mark Ridley (1560 – c. 1624), lexicographer of Russian
 - Nicholas Ridley (1500–1555), theologian and bishop
 - Philip Ridley (born 1964), playwright and children's writer
 - D. C. H. Rieu (1916–2008), scholar and translator
 - E. V. Rieu (1887–1972), scholar, translator and poet
 - Denise Riley (born 1948), poet and scholar
 - Gwendoline Riley (born 1979), novelist
 - Peter Riley (born 1940), poet and essayist
 - Stella Rimington (born 1935), novelist and intelligence officer
 - James Riordan (1936–2012), children's writer and footballer
 - Jonathan Ripley, writer, director and producer
 - Anne Isabella Thackeray Ritchie (1837–1919), novelist and essayist
 - James Ewing Ritchie (1820–1898), travel writer and political biographer
 - Joseph Ritson (1752–1803), antiquary and editor
 - Graham Robb (born 1958), biographer and critic
 - Andrew Roberts (born 1963), historian and biographer
 - David Roberts (living), novelist and editor
 - Emma Roberts (1794–1840), travel writer and poet
 - Katherine Roberts (born 1962), children's writer
 - Keith Roberts (1935–2000), novelist and story writer
 - Lynette Roberts (born Evelyn Beatrice Roberts, 1909–1995), poet
 - Michael Roberts (1902–1948), poet and critic
 - Michael Symmons Roberts (born 1963), poet and librettist
 - Michèle Roberts (born 1949), novelist and poet
 - Morley Roberts (1857–1942), novelist
 - Joseph Clinton Robertson (wrote as Sholto Percy, 1788–1852), writer and editor
 - Thomas William Robertson (1829–1871), playwright
 - Denise Robins (several pen names, 1897–1985), novelist
 - Patricia Robins (also as Claire Lorrimer, 1921–2016), novelist
 - Austin Robinson (1897–1993), economist
 - Derek Robinson (born 1932), novelist
 - Henry Crabb Robinson (1775–1867), man of letters
 - Hilary Robinson (born 1962), children's writer
 - Joan Robinson (1903–1983), economist
 - John Robinson (1919–1983), writer and bishop Honest to God
 - Mary Robinson (1757–1800), poet and novelist
 - Nigel Robinson (living), writer and editor
 - Peter Robinson (born 1953), poet and translator
 - Rony Robinson (born 1940), novelist and playwright
 - John Roby (1793–1850), poet and writer
 - Paul Roche (1916–2007), poet, novelist and critic
 - Regina Maria Roche (1764–1845), Gothic novelist
 - Rennell Rodd (1858–1941), poet and politician
 - John Rodker (1894–1955), writer and poet
 - Jane Rogers (born 1952), novelist
 - Samuel Rogers (1763–1855), poet
 - Thorold Rogers (1823–1890), political economist
 - Woodes Rogers (died 1732), travel writer and mariner
 - Peter Mark Roget (1779–1869), philologist, Roget's Thesaurus
 - Sax Rohmer (real name A. H. S. Ward, 1883–1959), novelist
 - Frederick Rolfe (1860–1913), novelist and artist
 - Richard Rolle (1290–1349), writer and Bible translator
 - L. T. C. Rolt (1910–1974), transport writer
 - Isabella Frances Romer (1798–1852), travel writer
 - Stephen Romer (born 1957), poet and critic
 - William Roscoe (1753–1831), scholar and poet
 - Elizabeth and Gerald Rose (latter b. 1935), children's writers and illustrators
 - Paul Rose (1935–2015), writer and politician
 - Michael Rosen (born 1946), children's writer and poet
 - Isaac Rosenberg (1890–1918), poet and playwright
 - Jack Rosenthal (1931–2004), screenwriter
 - Alan Ross (1922–2001), poet, writer and editor
 - Christina Rossetti (1830–1894), poet
 - Dante Gabriel Rossetti (1828–1882), poet and painter
 - Maria Francesca Rossetti (1827–1876), writer and translator
 - William Michael Rossetti (1829–1919), writer and critic
 - John Horace Round (1854–1928), historian and genealogist
 - W. H. D. Rouse (1863–1950), classicist and editor
 - Martin Routh (1755–1854), classicist
 - Alick Rowe (1939–2009), scriptwriter and novelist
 - Elizabeth Singer Rowe (1674–1737), poet and novelist
 - Nicholas Rowe (1674–1718), Poet Laureate
 - Richard Rowlands (c. 1550–1640), historian and antiquary
 - Samuel Rowlands (c. 1573–1630), poet and pamphleteer
 - Samuel Rowley (died c. 1633), playwright and actor
 - William Rowley (c. 1585–1626), playwright and actor
 - J. K. Rowling (born 1965), children's writer, Harry Potter
 - Lucinda Roy (born 1955), novelist and poet
 - Gillian Rubinstein (also as Lian Hearn, born 1942), children's writer and playwright
 - Carol Rumens (born 1944), poet and scholar
 - Katherine Rundell (born 1987), children's writer, playwright and academic
 - Peter Rushforth (1945–2005), novelist
 - John Ruskin (1819–1900), essayist, poet and art critic
 - Bertrand Russell (1872–1970), philosopher What I Believe
 - Lord John Russell (1792–1878), biographer and prime minister
 - William Clark Russell (1844–1911), novelist
 - William Howard Russell (1820–1907), travel writer and war correspondent
 - John D. Rutherford (born 1941), scholar and translator
 - Edward Rutherfurd (born 1948), historical fiction author
 - Cecil Bernard Rutley, (1888–1956), children's and science fiction
 - Chris Ryan (born 1961), novelist and soldier
 - Amy Louisa Rye (1851–unknown), chlidren's writer and social reformer
 - Gilbert Ryle (1900–1976), philosopher
 - Thomas Rymer (c. 1643–1713), Historiographer Royal and poet
 - Royce Ryton (1924–2009), playwright
 
S
- Suhayl Saadi (born 1961), novelist, playwright and physician
 - Oliver Sacks (1933–2015), writer and neurologist
 - Charles Sackville, Earl of Dorset (1638–1706), poet
 - Lady Margaret Sackville (1881–1963), poet and children's writer
 - Thomas Sackville, Earl of Dorset (1536–1608), poet and statesman
 - Vita Sackville-West (1892–1962), poet and novelist All Passion Spent
 - Lorna Sage (1943–2001), critic and scholar
 - Lawrence Sail (born 1942), poet and editor
 - George Saintsbury (1845–1933), critic
 - Saki (real name Hector Hugh Munro) (1870–1916), story writer and satirist
 - Henry Stephens Salt (1851–1939), writer and campaigner
 - John Saltmarsh (died 1647), writer and cleric
 - Fiona Sampson (born 1968), poet and editor
 - Kevin Sampson (born 1961), novelist
 - Ignatius Sancho (c. 1729–1780), writer and domestic servant
 - Nicholas Sanders (c. 1530–1581), polemicist and RC priest
 - Robert Sanderson (1587–1663), theologian
 - Edwin Sandys (1519–1588), Bishops' Bible translator and bishop
 - George Sandys (1577–1644), poet and traveller
 - Peter Sanger (born 1943), poet and scholar
 - C. J. Sansom (born 1952), novelist
 - Clive Sansom (1910–1981), poet, playwright and educator
 - William Sansom (1912–1976), novelist and travel writer
 - Siegfried Sassoon (1886–1967), poet and novelist Memoirs of a Fox-Hunting Man
 - Hilary Saint George Saunders (wrote as Francis Beeding, etc., 1898–1951), novelist
 - James Savage (1767–1845), writer and antiquary
 - Richard Savage (c. 1697–1743), poet and satirist
 - Henry Savile (1549–1622), scholar and AV translator
 - Michael Saward (1932–2015), hymnist
 - Dorothy L. Sayers (1893–1957), novelist, Lord Peter Wimsey
 - Frank Sayers (1763–1817), poet and metaphysician
 - Francis Scarfe (1911–1986), poet and novelist
 - Vernon Scannell (1922–2007), poet
 - Alex Scarrow (living), novelist and screenwriter
 - Simon Scarrow (born 1962), historical novelist
 - Simon Schama (born 1945), historian
 - Ann Schlee (born 1934), novelist
 - Caroline Lucy Scott (1784–1857), novelist and religious writer
 - Catherine Amy Dawson Scott (1865–1934), poet, playwright and novelist
 - Geoffrey Scott (1884–1929), writer and poet
 - Hardiman Scott (1920–1999), writer and poet
 - Hugh Stowell Scott (wrote as Henry Seton Merriman, c. 1863–1903), novelist
 - Jane Scott (1779–1839), playwright
 - John Scott (1783–1821), editor and writer
 - John Scott of Amwell (1731–1783), poet
 - John A. Scott (born 1948), poet and novelist
 - Mary Scott (1751/1752–1793), poet
 - Paul Mark Scott (1920–1978), novelist, playwright and poet
 - Sarah Scott (1720–1795), novelist and translator
 - William Bell Scott (1811–1890), poet and artist
 - Will Scott (1893−1964), crime writer and playwright
 - Anne Scott-James (1913–2009), novelist, editor and garden writer
 - E. J. Scovell (1907–1999), poet
 - James Scudamore (born 1976), novelist
 - George Bazeley Scurfield (1920–1991), poet, novelist and politician
 - Marcus Sedgwick (born 1968), children's writer
 - Charles Sedley (1639–1701), poet and rake
 - Kate Sedley (real name Brenda Clarke, 1926–2022), novelist
 - Stephen Sedley (b. 1939), writer on law
 - Frederic Seebohm (1833–1912), economic historian
 - John Robert Seeley (1834–1895), historian and essayist
 - Rachel Seiffert (born 1971), novelist
 - David Selbourne (born 1937), philosopher and playwright
 - Catherine Selden (fl. 1797–1817), novelist
 - John Selden (1584–1654), polymath
 - Will Self (born 1961), novelist and columnist
 - Charles Seltman (1886–1957), art historian
 - George Selwyn (1719–1791), correspondent and wit
 - Nassau William Senior (1790–1864), economist
 - Sepharial (real name Walter Gorn Old, 1864–1929), astrologer and numerologist
 - Gitta Sereny (1921–2012), biographer and historian
 - Ian Serraillier (1912–1994), novelist and poet
 - Robert Service (born 1947), historian and scholar
 - Diane Setterfield (born 1964), novelist
 - Elkanah Settle (1648–1724), playwright and poet
 - Tim Severin (1940–2020), writer, historian and explorer
 - Anna Seward ("Swan of Lichfield", 1747–1809), poet and biographer
 - Thomas Seward (1708–1790), writer
 - William Seward (1747–1799), anecdotist
 - Anna Sewell (1820–1878), novelist, Black Beauty
 - Elizabeth Missing Sewell (1815–1906), novelist and religious writer
 - Mary Wright Sewell (1797–1884), children's writer
 - William Sewell (1804–1874), writer, translator and cleric
 - Miranda Seymour (born 1948), biographer, novelist and children's writer
 - Martin Seymour-Smith (1928–1998), poet and critic
 - Thomas Shadwell (c. 1642–1692), Poet Laureate, Historiographer Royal and playwright
 - Anthony Shaffer (1926–2001), playwright and novelist
 - Peter Shaffer (1926–2016), playwright Amadeus
 - Eddy Shah (born 1944), novelist and newspaper owner
 - Saira Shah (born 1964), writer and film-maker
 - Tahir Shah (born 1966), travel writer and critic
 - Olivia Shakespear (1863–1938), novelist and playwright
 - Nicholas Shakespeare (born 1957), novelist and biographer
 - William Shakespeare (c. 1564–1616), poet and playwright Hamlet
 - Edward Shanks (1892–1953), poet and critic
 - Jo Shapcott (born 1953), poet and scholar
 - Evelyn Sharp (1869–1955), journalist, children's writer and suffragist
 - Jane Sharp (born c. 1641), writer on midwifery
 - Margery Sharp (1905–1991), novelist, children's writer and playwright
 - Richard Sharp (1759–1835), polemicist and hatter
 - Thomas Wilfred Sharp (1901–1978), writer on planning
 - Kevin Sharpe (1949–2011), historian
 - Richard Sharpe (living), historian
 - Richard Bowdler Sharpe (1847–1909), ornithologist and editor
 - Tom Sharpe (1928–2013), novelist
 - George Shaw (1751–1813), botanist and zoologist
 - Pete Shaw (born 1966), writer and producer
 - Peter Shaw (1694–1763), physician, medical writer and translator
 - Robert Shaw (1927–1978), actor and novelist
 - Watkins Shaw (1911–1996), musicologist
 - John Shebbeare (1709–1788), novelist and satirist
 - Wilfrid Sheed (1930–2011), writer, novelist and essayist
 - John Sheffield (also as Mulgrave, then Buckingham, 1647–1721) poet and essayist
 - Edward Sheldon (1599–1687), religious translator
 - Mary Shelley (1797–1851), author, Frankenstein
 - Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792–1822), poet Ode to the West Wind
 - George Shelvocke (1675–1742), travel writer
 - William Shenstone (1714–1763), poet
 - Stav Sherez (born 1970), novelist
 - Clare Sheridan (1885–1970), writer and sculptor
 - Richard Brinsley Sheridan (1751–1816), playwright, The Rivals
 - William Sherlock (1641–1707), theologian and cleric
 - Philip Sherrard (1922–1995), classicist, translator and religious writer
 - R. C. Sherriff (1890–1975), playwright, novelist and screenwriter Journey's End
 - Charles Scott Sherrington (1857–1952), science writer and Nobel Prize winner
 - Norman Sherry (1935–2016), novelist and biographer
 - Mary Martha Sherwood (1775–1851), children's writer and tractarian
 - James Shirley (1596–1666), playwright
 - Joseph Henry Shorthouse (1834–1903), novelist
 - Fredegond Shove (1889–1949), poet
 - Nevil Shute (1899–1960), novelist and aviation engineer A Town Like Alice
 - Penelope Shuttle (born 1947), poet and novelist
 - Gareth Sibson (born 1977), novelist and broadcaster
 - Elizabeth Siddal (1829–1862), artist and poet
 - Mary Sidney (later Mary Herbert, countess of Pembroke, 1561–1621), poet and translator
 - Philip Sidney (1554–1586), poet and soldier
 - Robert Sidney, earl of Leicester (1563–1626) poet and statesman
 - Una Lucy Silberrad (1872–1955), novelist
 - Jon Silkin (1930–1997), poet, editor and critic
 - Alan Sillitoe (1928–2010), novelist, poet and translator Saturday Night and Sunday Morning
 - Elizabeth Simcoe (1762–1850), diarist
 - George Augustus Simcox (1841–1905), poet and scholar
 - Kathryn Simmonds (born 1972), poet and story writer
 - Jack Simmons (1915–2000), historian
 - Brian Simon (1915–2002), educator
 - David Simpson (1745–1799), writer and cleric
 - Dorothy Simpson (born 1933), novelist
 - Helen Simpson (born 1959), novelist and story writer
 - Joe Simpson (born 1960), writer and mountaineer
 - John Simpson (1746–1812), writer and Unitarian minister
 - John Simpson (born 1953), lexicographer
 - John Palgrave Simpson (1807–1887), playwright
 - N. F. Simpson (1919–2011), playwright
 - George Robert Sims (1847–1922), writer, poet and journalist
 - Andrew Sinclair (1935–2019), novelist, historian and biographer
 - Clive Sinclair (1940–2021), novelist
 - Ian Sinclair writer, poet and film-maker
 - May Sinclair (real name Mary Amelia St. Clair, 1863–1946), novelist, poet and critic
 - C. H. Sisson (1914–2003), poet, translator and writer
 - Edith Sitwell (1887–1964), poet
 - Osbert Sitwell (1892–1969), writer
 - Sacheverell Sitwell (1897–1988), poet and writer
 - Walter William Skeat (1835–1912), philologist
 - Barbara Skelton (1916–1996), novelist and memoirist
 - John Skelton (c. 1460–1529), poet and satirist
 - Robert Skidelsky (born 1939), economic historian and biographer
 - Joseph Skipsey (1832–1903), poet and editor
 - G. E. M. Skues (1858–1949), fishing writer
 - Eleanor Sleath (1770–1847), Gothic novelist
 - Barbara Sleigh (1906–1982), children's writer Carbonel series
 - Edward Slow (1841–1925), dialect poet
 - Carolyn Smart (born 1952), poet
 - Christopher Smart (1722–1771), poet
 - Francis Edward Smedley (1818–1864), novelist
 - Menella Bute Smedley (1819–1877), novelist, poet and translator
 - Albert Richard Smith (1816–1860), writer and mountaineer
 - C. Fox Smith (1882–1954), poet and nautical and children's writer
 - Charlotte Smith (1749–1806), poet and novelist
 - Charlotte Fell Smith (1851–1937) historian and biographer
 - David Smith (born 1963), historian
 - Dodie Smith (1896–1990), novelist and playwright, The Hundred and One Dalmatians
 - Edmund Smith (1672–1710), poet and translator
 - Eleanor Smith (1902–1945), novelist
 - Emma Smith (1923–2018), novelist and children's writer
 - Georgina Castle Smith (1845–1933), children's writer and novelist
 - Horace Smith (originally Horatio Smith, 1779–1849), novelist and poet
 - Joan Smith (born 1953), novelist and journalist
 - John Frederick Smith (1806–1890), novelist
 - Ken Smith (1938–2003), poet
 - Michael Marshall Smith (born 1965), novelist and screenwriter
 - Miles Smith (1554–1624), scholar, AV translator and cleric
 - Sid Smith (born 1949), novelist and journalist
 - Stevie Smith (1902–1971), poet and novelist
 - Sydney Smith (1771–1845), writer and cleric
 - Thomas Smith (fl. 1600–1627), writer and soldier
 - Tom Rob Smith (born 1979), novelist
 - Wentworth Smith (1571 – c. 1623), playwright
 - William Smith (fl. 1590s), poet
 - William Smith (1769–1839), geologist
 - William Smith (1813–1893), lexicographer
 - Zadie Smith (born 1975), novelist
 - Frank Smythe (1900–1949), writer and mountaineer
 - Percy Smythe (1826–1869), man of letters
 - C. P. Snow (1905–1980), novelist and physicist Strangers and Brothers
 - John Snow (born 1941), poet, autobiographer and first-class cricketer
 - William Somervile (1675–1742), poet
 - Charles Sorley (1895–1915), poet
 - William Sotheby (1757–1833), poet and translator
 - Ahdaf Soueif (born 1950), novelist and translator
 - Robert South (1634–1716), theologian and cleric
 - Joanna Southcott (1750–1814), religious writer
 - R. W. Southern (1912–2001), historian
 - Caroline Anne Southey (1786–1854), poet
 - Robert Southey (1774–1843), Poet Laureate
 - Robert Southwell (1561–1595), poet, tractarian and martyr
 - Stephen Southwold (1887–1964), novelist and children's writer
 - Nancy Spain (1917–1964), novelist, biographer and journalist
 - Robert Spaulding (fl. 1610s), scholar, AV translator and cleric
 - Rachel Speght (1596-16??), poet and polemicist
 - Henry Spelman (c. 1562–1641), historian and antiquary
 - Bernard Spencer (1909–1963), poet
 - Colin Spencer (born 1933), writer, artist and broadcaster
 - Herbert Spencer (1820–1903), philosopher
 - John Spencer (1630–1693), scholar and cleric
 - William Robert Spencer (1769–1834), poet and wit
 - Emily Spender (1841–1922), novelist and suffragette
 - Lillian Spender (1835–1895), novelist and essayist
 - Stephen Spender (1909–1995), poet, novelist and travel writer
 - Edmund Spenser (c. 1552–1599), poet, The Faerie Queene
 - John Spenser (1559–1614), scholar, AV translator and cleric
 - Dennis Spooner (1932–1986), TV screenwriter
 - William Archibald Spooner (1844–1930), scholar, spoonerisms
 - Jean Sprackland (born 1962), poet
 - Francis Spufford (born 1964), writer
 - Charles Spurgeon (1834–1892), writer and Baptist minister
 - J. C. Squire (1884–1958), poet and historian
 - Edward St Aubyn (born 1960), novelist and journalist
 - Bayle St. John (1822–1859), travel writer and biographer
 - Henry St John, Lord Bolingbroke (1678–1751) politician and philosopher
 - James Augustus St. John (born James John, 1795–1875), journalist, writer and traveller
 - Spenser St. John (1825–1910), biographer, travel writer and diplomat
 - Brian Stableford (born 1948), SF writer
 - Tom Stacey (1930–2022), novelist, writer and publisher
 - David A. T. Stafford (born 1942), historian
 - Julian Stallabrass (living), art historian
 - Jon Stallworthy (1935–2014), scholar and poet
 - John Stammers (born 1954), poet
 - Josiah Stamp (1880–1941), economist and banker
 - Derek Stanford (1918–2008), biographer and poet
 - Louisa Stanhope (fl. 1806–1827), novelist
 - Philip Stanhope, Lord Chesterfield, (1694–1773) politician and writer
 - Arthur Stanley (1815–1881), theologian and cleric
 - Thomas Stanley (1625–1678), poet and philosopher
 - Andy Stanton (living), children's writer,
 - Olaf Stapledon (1886–1950), philosopher and novelist
 - Robert Stapylton (died 1669), playwright, poet and translator
 - Freya Stark (1893–1993), travel writer
 - Mariana Starke (1761/1762–1838), travel writer, poet and playwright
 - David Starkey (b. 1945), historian
 - Boris Starling (living), novelist and screenwriter
 - William Thomas Stead (1849–1912), campaigner
 - Michael Steed (born 1940), political scientist and broadcaster
 - Wickham Steed (1871–1856), journalist and historian
 - Anne Steele (wrote as Theodosia, 1717–1778), hymnist
 - David Ramsay Steele (living), philosopher
 - Jonathan Steele (living), writer and journalist
 - Marguerite Steen (1894–1975), novelist and biographer
 - George Steevens (1736–1800), Shakespearean scholar
 - James Kenneth Stephen (1859–1892), poet
 - Leslie Stephen (1832–1904), writer and mountaineer
 - Frederic George Stephens (1828–1907), art critic
 - Henry Pottinger Stephens (1851–1903), playwright and novelist
 - James Francis Stephens (1792–1852), entomologist
 - Robert Stephens (1665–1732), Historiographer Royal
 - Simon Stephens (born 1971), playwright
 - G. B. Stern (1890–1973), novelist, playwright and biographer
 - Laurence Sterne (1713–1768), novelist and cleric, Tristram Shandy
 - George Alexander Stevens (1710–1780), playwright, poet and actor
 - Matthew Stevenson (died 1654), poet
 - William Stevenson (1530–1575), poet and playwright
 - Angus Stewart (1936–1998) novelist, diarist and poet
 - John "Walking" Stewart (1747–1822), philosopher and traveller
 - Mary Stewart (1916–2014), novelist
 - William Stobbs (1914–2000), children's writer and illustrator
 - Julian Stockwin (born 1944), novelist
 - Sewell Stokes (1902–1979), novelist, biographer and playwright
 - Nick Stone (born 1966), novelist
 - Samuel John Stone (1839–1900), hymnist and cleric
 - David Lee Stone (born 1978), children's writer
 - David Storey (1933–2017), novelist and playwright
 - Catherine Storr (1913–2001), children's writer
 - Thomas Story (c. 1670–1742), writer and Quaker
 - John Stow (c. 1525–1605), historian and antiquary
 - Herbert Strang (pseudonym of George Herbert Ely, 1866–1958, and Charles James L'Estrange, 1867–1947), children's writers
 - Alix Strachey (1892–1973), psychoanalyst and translator
 - James Strachey (1887–1967), psychoanalyst and editor
 - Julia Strachey (1901–1979), novelist
 - Lytton Strachey (1880–1932), biographer and critic, Eminent Victorians
 - Ray Strachey (originally Rachel Costelloe, 1887–1940), biographer and campaigner
 - Paul Strathern (born 1940), novelist and scholar
 - Noel Streatfeild (1895–1986), children's writer Ballet Shoes
 - A. G. Street (1892–1966), writer and broadcaster
 - Cecil Street (also as John Rhode, Miles Burton etc., 1884–1965), novelist
 - Joe Stretch (born 1982), novelist
 - Hesba Stretton (real name Sarah Smith, 1832–1911), novelist and children's writer
 - Agnes Strickland (1796–1874), historian, poet and children's writer
 - William Strode (1600–1643), poet
 - Leonard Strong (wrote as L. A. G. Strong, 1896–1958), novelist, poet and children's writer
 - Jan Struther (real name Joyce Anstruther, (1901–1953), novelist and hymnist
 - John Strype (1643–1737), historian, biographer and cleric
 - Alexander Stuart (living), novelist and screenwriter
 - Muriel Stuart (1885–1967), poet and garden writer
 - John Stubbs or Stubbe (c. 1543–1591), pamphleteer
 - John Studley (c. 1545 – c. 1590), translator
 - Joseph Sturge (1793–1859) abolitionist writer and campaigner
 - Howard Sturgis (1855–1920), novelist
 - Julian Sturgis (1848–1904), novelist and poet
 - George Sturt (also as George Bourne, 1863–1927), country writer
 - John Strype (1643–1737), historian and biographer
 - Showell Styles (1908–2005), novelist and children's writer
 - John Suckling (1609–1642), poet
 - J. W. N. Sullivan (1886–1937), science writer
 - Montague Summers (1880–1948), writer and occultist
 - Kate Summerscale (born 1965), writer and journalist
 - Robert Smith Surtees (1805–1864), novelist
 - Alice Sutcliffe (fl. 1624–1634), religious writer
 - William Sutcliffe (born 1971), novelist
 - Alfred Sutro (1863–1933), playwright and translator
 - E. W. Swanton (1907–2000), cricket writer and broadcaster
 - Graham Swift (born 1949), novelist
 - Algernon Charles Swinburne (1837–1909), poet
 - Robert Swindells (born 1939), children's writer
 - Randall Swingler (1909–1967), poet
 - Frank Swinnerton (1884–1982), novelist and editor
 - Christopher Sykes (1907–1986), travel writer and biographer
 - Percy Sykes (1867–1945), travel writer and historian
 - Joshua Sylvester (1563–1618), poet
 - John Addington Symonds (1840–1893), poet and critic
 - A. J. A. Symons (1900–1941), writer and bibliographer
 - Arthur Symons (1865–1945), poet and essayist
 - Julian Symons (1912–1994), crime writer and poet
 - Mitchell Symons (born 1957), writer and journalist
 - George Szirtes (born 1948), poet and translator
 
T
- Thomas Noon Talfourd (1795–1854), writer, playwright and lawyer
 - Derek Tangye (1912–1996), writer
 - Nigel Tangye (1909–1988), writer and flying instructor
 - Heather Tanner (1903–1993), countryside writer
 - James T. Tanner (1858–1915), playwright and director
 - Thomas Tanner (1630–1682), writer and cleric
 - Thomas Tanner (1674–1735), antiquary and bishop
 - Theaurau John Tany (originally Thomas Totney, 1608–1659), religious writer
 - Emma Tatham (1829–1855), poet
 - John Tatham (fl. 1632–64), playwright and poet
 - Jemima von Tautphoeus (born Jemima Montgomery, 1807–1893), novelist
 - R. H. Tawney (1880–1962), economic historian
 - A. J. P. Taylor (1906–1990), historian
 - Andrew Taylor (born 1951), novelist
 - Ann Taylor (1782–1866), poet and children's writer
 - D. J. Taylor (born 1960), novelist and biographer
 - Edgar Taylor (1793–1839), writer and translator
 - Elizabeth Taylor (1912–1975), novelist
 - Emily Taylor (1795–1872), writer, poet and hymnist
 - G. P. Taylor (born 1958), novelist and cleric
 - Henry Taylor (1711–1785), polemicist and cleric
 - Henry Taylor (1800–1886), playwright
 - Isaac Taylor (1787–1865), scholar, cleric and inventor
 - Jane Taylor (1783–1824), children's poet and novelist
 - Jeremy Taylor (1613–1667), religious writer
 - John Taylor (1703–1772), autobiographer
 - John Taylor (the "Water Poet", 1578–1653), poet
 - John Taylor (1750–1826), poet and hymnist
 - Philip Meadows Taylor (1808–1876), novelist
 - Richard Taylor (1782–1858), naturalist and editor
 - Sean Taylor (living), children's writer
 - Thomas Taylor (1758–1835), translator
 - Tom Taylor (1817–1880), playwright and editor
 - William Taylor (died 1423), Lollard theologian
 - William Taylor (1765–1836), scholar and translator
 - Roma Tearne (born 1954), novelist
 - Barry Tebb (born 1942), poet and anthologist
 - Mrs. Bartle Teeling (1851–1906), non-fiction writer and novelist
 - William Temple (1555–1627), logician
 - William Temple (1628–1699), essayist and statesman
 - William Temple (1881–1944), writer and archbishop
 - William F. Temple (1914–1989), SF writer
 - Edward Tennant (1897–1916), poet
 - Emma Tennant (1937–2017), novelist
 - Alfred, Lord Tennyson (1809–1892), Poet Laureate, The Charge of the Light Brigade
 - Frederick Tennyson (1807–1898), poet
 - Henry Teonge (c. 1620–1690), diarist and naval chaplain
 - Lisa St Aubin de Terán (born 1953), novelist and memoirist
 - J. E. Harold Terry (1885–1939), novelist, playwright and critic
 - A. S. J. Tessimond (1902–1962), poet
 - Anne Isabella Thackeray, Lady Ritchie (1837–1919), novelist and essayist
 - William Makepeace Thackeray (1811–1863), novelist, Vanity Fair
 - Algernon Sydney Thelwall (1795–1863), writer and cleric
 - John Thelwall (1764–1834), poet and writer
 - Sydney Thelwall (1834–1922), scholar, translator and cleric
 - Lewis Theobald (1688–1744), scholar, critic and translator
 - Marcel Theroux (born 1968), novelist and broadcaster
 - Philip Thicknesse (1719–1792), writer
 - Angela Thirkell (1890–1961), novelist
 - Connop Thirlwall (1797–1875), historian, translator and bishop
 - Adam Thirlwell (born 1978), novelist
 - William Turner Thiselton-Dyer (1843–1926), botanist
 - D. M. Thomas (1935–2023), novelist, poet and translator
 - David St John Thomas (1929–2014), writer
 - Donald Serrell Thomas (also as Francis Selwyn, b. 1926), novelist, biographer and poet
 - Edward Thomas (1878–1917), poet
 - Edward J. Thomas (1869–1958), historian of Buddhism and librarian
 - Elizabeth Thomas (1675–1731), poet
 - Elizabeth Thomas (wrote as Mrs Bridget Bluemantle and Mrs Martha Homely, 1770/1771–1855), novelist and poet
 - Hugh Thomas (1931–2017), historian
 - Scarlett Thomas (born 1972), novelist
 - W. Ian Thomas (1914–2007), writer and missionary
 - John Thomlinson (1692–1761), diarist and cleric
 - Edward Healy Thompson (1813–1891), religious writer and editor
 - Flora Thompson (1876–1947), novelist and poet, Lark Rise to Candleford
 - Francis Thompson (1859–1907), poet
 - Harry Thompson (1960–2005), biographer, novelist and TV producer
 - James Thompson (1817–1877), journalist and historian
 - Kate Thompson (born 1956), novelist and children's writer
 - Thomas Thompson (1880–1951), fiction and non-fiction writer
 - William Thompson (c. 1712 – c. 1766), poet
 - William Thoms (1803–1885), antiquary and miscellanist
 - A. A. Thomson (1894–1968), cricket and travel writer
 - Giles Thomson (1553–1612), scholar, AV translator and cleric
 - Jamie Thomson (born 1958), novelist and children's writer
 - Katherine Thomson (also as Mrs Thomson and Grace Wharton, 1797–1862), novelist and historian
 - Richard Thomson (fl. 1600s), scholar, AV translator and cleric
 - Rupert Thomson (born 1955), novelist and memoirist
 - Wilfrid Thorley (1878–1963), poet and educator
 - George Walter Thornbury (1828–1876), poet, novelist and travel writer
 - Guy Thorne (real name C. Ranger Gull, 1876–1923), novelist
 - Matt Thorne (born 1974), novelist and children's writer
 - William Thorne (c. 1568–1630), orientalist, AV translator and cleric
 - Bonnell Thornton (1725–1768), poet, essayist and critic
 - Robert John Thornton (1768–1837), botanist and physician
 - Tim Thornton (born 1973), novelist and musician
 - Adam Thorpe (born 1956), poet and novelist
 - Kay Thorpe (living), romantic novelist
 - Ralph Thoresby (1658–1725), antiquary and diarist
 - Hester Thrale (also as Mrs. Piozzi, 1741–1821), diarist and biographer,
 - Colin Thubron (born 1939), travel writer and novelist
 - Edward Thurlow, Lord Thurlow (1731–1806), poet and lord chancellor
 - E. Temple Thurston (1879–1933), playwright, poet and novelist
 - Joseph Thurston (1704–1732), poet
 - Ann Thwaite (born 1932), biographer
 - Anthony Thwaite (1930–2021), poet and writer
 - Chidiock Tichborne (1558–1586), poet and conspirator
 - Thomas Tickell (1686–1740), poet
 - Robert Tighe (died 1620), AV translator and cleric
 - Terence Tiller (1916–1987), poet and radio producer
 - E. M. W. Tillyard (1889–1962), classicist and literary critic
 - Stella Tillyard (born 1957), historian and novelist
 - John Timbs (also as Horace Welby, 1801–1875), writer and antiquary
 - William M. Timlin (1892–1943), writer and illustrator
 - Gillian Tindall (living), historian and novelist
 - Peter Tinniswood (1936–2003), novelist and scriptwriter
 - John Tobin (1770–1804), playwright
 - Barbara Euphan Todd (1890–1976), novelist and children's writer
 - H. E. Todd (1908–1988), children's writer
 - Malcolm Todd (1939–2013), historian
 - J. R. R. Tolkien (1892–1973), fantasy writer and scholar, The Lord of the Rings
 - Simon Tolkien (born 1959), novelist and barrister
 - Elizabeth Tollet (1694–1754), poet
 - Francis Tolson (died 1745), poet
 - Thomas Tomkis (c. 1580–1634), playwright
 - Claire Tomalin (born 1933), biographer
 - Charles Tomlinson (1927–2015), poet and translator
 - H. M. Tomlinson, (1873–1958), travel writer, novelist and journalist
 - Theresa Tomlinson (born 1946), children's writer
 - Rosemary Tonks (1932–2014), poet and novelist
 - Charlotte Elizabeth Tonna (pen name Charlotte Elizabeth, 1790–1846), tractarian and novelist
 - John Horne Tooke (1736–1812), philologist and politician
 - Rebecca Tope (living), crime writer and journalist
 - Augustus Montague Toplady (1740–1778), theologian and hymnist
 - Angela Topping (born 1954), poet and critic
 - Paul Torday (1946–2013), novelist
 - Chris Torrance (1941–2021), poet and musician
 - Richard Tottel (died 1594), miscellanist
 - Cyril Tourneur (1575–1626), playwright
 - Nigel Tourneur (fl. 1898), writer
 - Doreen Tovey (1918–2008), writer
 - Peter Townend (1935–1999), writer and journalist
 - John Rowe Townsend (1922–2014), children's writer and scholar
 - Joseph Townsend (1739–1816), economist, physician and cleric
 - Peter Townsend (1928–2009), sociologist and economist
 - Sue Townsend (1946–2014), novelist, Adrian Mole books
 - Tom Townsend (born 1971), writer and bridge player
 - Aurelian Townshend (1583–1643), poet and playwright
 - Charles Townshend (born 1945), historian
 - Chauncy Hare Townshend (1798–1868), poet and cleric
 - Thomas Townson (1715–1792), writer and cleric
 - Arnold Toynbee (1852–1883), economic historian
 - Arnold J. Toynbee (1889–1975), historian
 - Philip Toynbee (1916–1981), novelist, poet and journalist
 - Polly Toynbee (born 1946), journalist and writer
 - John Tradescant the Younger (1608–1662), botanist and antiquary
 - Thomas Traherne (1636/1637–1674), poet and religious writer
 - Henry Duff Traill (1842–1900), humorist, editor and biographer
 - Anna Trapnell (fl. 1650s), religious writer
 - Ben Travers (1886–1980), playwright and novelist
 - Karen Traviss (living), novelist
 - Mary Treadgold (1910–2005), children's writer
 - Geoffrey Trease (1909–1998), children's writer
 - Miles Tredinnick (born 1955), playwright, screenwriter and singer
 - Iris Tree (1897–1968), poet and actress
 - Viola Tree (1884–1938), writer and actress
 - Henry Treece (1911–1966), poet, novelist and children's writer
 - Edward John Trelawny (1792–1881), biographer and novelist
 - Rose Tremain (born 1943), novelist
 - Kate Tremayne (living), novelist
 - Rex Tremlett (1903–1986), writer and broadcaster
 - Francis Chenevix Trench (1805–1886), writer and cleric
 - Richard Chenevix Trench (1807–1886), philologist, poet and archbishop
 - Christopher Trent, author of Motoring Holidays in Britain
 - Robert Tressell or Tressall (originally Robert Croker, later Noonan, 1870–1911), novelist, The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists
 - G. M. Trevelyan (1876–1962), historian
 - George Trevelyan (1838–1928), writer and statesman
 - R. C. Trevelyan (1872–1951), poet and translator
 - Raleigh Trevelyan (1923–2014), historian
 - John Trevisa (1342–1402), translator
 - Elleston Trevor (originally Trevor Dudley-Smith, also as Adam Hall etc., 1920–1995), novelist
 - Rachel Trickett (1923–1999), novelist and scholar
 - Jonathan Trigell (born 1974), novelist
 - Sarah Trimmer (1741–1810), children's writer
 - Henry Baker Tristram (1822–1906), travel writer, naturalist and cleric
 - Anthony Trollope (1815–1882), novelist, Chronicles of Barsetshire
 - Frances Trollope (1780–1863), novelist and travel writer
 - Joanna Trollope (also as Caroline Harvey, b. 1943), novelist
 - Thomas Adolphus Trollope (1810–1892), travel writer and novelist
 - Thomas Trotter (1760–1832), physician and medical writer
 - Peter Trower (1930–2017), poet and novelist
 - Thomas Tryon (1634–1703), writer and vegetarian
 - Edwin Charles Tubb (several pen names, 1919–2010), novelist
 - Abraham Tucker (wrote as Edward Search, 1705–1774), philosopher
 - Charlotte Maria Tucker (wrote as A.L.O.E, 1821–1893), children's writer
 - Cuthbert Tunstall or Tonstall (1474–1559), writer and bishop
 - Martin Farquhar Tupper (1810–1889), writer and poet
 - George Turberville (c. 1540 – pre–1597), poet
 - Charles Tennyson Turner (1808–1879), poet and translator
 - David Turner (1927–1990), playwright and scriptwriter
 - Ernest Sackville Turner (1909–2006), writer and journalist
 - Joe Turner (living), scriptwriter and playwright
 - John Frayn Turner (living), military historian
 - Matthew Turner (died 1788), philosopher and physician
 - Philip Turner (wrote as Stephen Chance, 1925–2006), children's writer and cleric
 - Reginald Turner (1869–1938), novelist and aesthete
 - Roger Turner (living), garden writer and designer
 - Sharon Turner (1768–1847), historian
 - Steve Turner (living), poet and biographer
 - Thomas Turner (1729–1793), diarist
 - Tom Turner (living), garden writer and designer
 - Thomas Tusser (1524–1580), poet and farmer
 - Ethel Brilliana Tweedie (also as Mrs Alec Tweedie 1862–1940), travel writer
 - Robert Twigger (born 1964), writer
 - Horace Twiss (c. 1787–1849), writer and politician
 - Kenneth Tynan (1927–1980), drama critic and producer
 - William Tyndale (1494–1536), scholar and Bible translator
 - George Tyrrell (1861–1909), theologian and scholar
 - Robert Yelverton Tyrrell (1844–1914), scholar and translator
 - Thomas Tyrwhitt (1730–1786), scholar, editor and critic
 
U
- Nicholas Udall (1505–1556), playwright and translator, Ralph Roister Doister
 - Jenny Uglow (born 1947), biographer and critic
 - Evelyn Underhill (1875–1941), religious writer and novelist
 - Peter Underwood (1923–2014), writer and broadcaster
 - Barry Unsworth (1930–2012), novelist
 - Cathi Unsworth (living), novelist
 - Arthur Upfield (1890–1964), crime writer
 - John Upton (1707–1760), editor and critic
 - Lawrence Upton (1949–2020), poet and artist
 - Edward Upward (1903–2009), novelist and story writer
 - Mark Urban (born 1961), military writer
 - J. O. Urmson (1915–2012), philosopher
 - Thomas Usk (died 1388), poet
 - Sarah Elizabeth Utterson (1781–1851), gothic short story writer
 - Alison Uttley (1884–1976), children's writer, Little Grey Rabbit
 
V
- Horace Annesley Vachell (1861–1955), novelist and playwright
 - John Van der Kiste (born 1954), writer and polymath
 - John Vanbrugh (1664–1726), playwright and architect
 - Bernard Vaughan (1847–1922), writer and RC priest
 - Keith Vaughan (1912–1977), diarist and artist
 - Robert Vaughan (1795–1868), historian, editor and Congregationalist minister
 - Llewellyn Vaughan-Lee (born 1953), writer and Sufi mystic
 - Thomas Vaux (1510–1556), poet
 - Kate Veale, author and illustrator of children's books.
 - Frances Vernon (1963–1991), novelist
 - Salley Vickers (born 1948), novelist and psychotherapist
 - Sherard Vines (1890–1974), poet, novelist and critic
 - Elfrida Vipont (real name Elfrida Vipont Foulds, 1902–1992), children's writer
 - E. H. Visiak (real name Edward Harold Physick, 1878–1972), poet and novelist
 - Ernest Alfred Vizetelly (1853–1922), translator
 - Frederick Augustus Voigt (1892–1957), foreign affairs writer
 
W
- Thomas Wade (1805–1875), poet and playwright
 - Lucy Wadham (born 1964), novelist and journalist
 - Rekha Waheed (living), novelist
 - John Wain (1925–1994), poet and novelist
 - Alfred Wainwright (1907–1991), guidebook writer
 - Daniel Wakefield (1776–1846), political economist
 - Edward Gibbon Wakefield (1796–1862), writer and politician
 - Gilbert Wakefield (1756–1801), scholar and polemicist
 - H. Russell Wakefield (1890–1964), novelist and story writer
 - Priscilla Wakefield (1871–1832), educator and philanthropist
 - Robert Wakefield (died 1537), linguist and scholar
 - George Waldron (1690 – c. 1730), topographer and poet
 - Arthur Waley (1889–1966), orientalist and translator
 - Alan Walker (born 1930), biographer, musicologist and broadcaster
 - Charles Walker (fl. 1860s), religious writer
 - Charles Curwen Walker (1856–1940), Christadelphian writer and editor
 - George Walker (c. 1581–1651), writer and cleric
 - George Walker (c. 1734–1807), dissenting writer and mathematician
 - George Walker (1772–1847), novelist and political writer
 - George Walker (1803 – post–1851), chess writer
 - Obadiah Walker (1616–1699), scholar and educator
 - Ted Walker (1934–2004), poet, dramatist and broadcaster
 - Alfred Russel Wallace (1823–1913), naturalist and biologist
 - Doreen Wallace (1897–1989), novelist and agricultural writer
 - Edgar Wallace (1875–1932), novelist and playwright
 - Helen Wallace (born 1946), current affairs writer
 - Ian Wallace (living), ornithologist
 - John Graham Wallace (born 1966), children's writer and illustrator
 - Nick Wallace (born 1972), novelist
 - Robert Wallace (1791–1850), writer, biographer and Unitarian minister
 - William Wallace (born 1941), scholar and writer on government
 - J. M. Wallace-Hadrill (1916–1985), historian
 - Edmund Waller (1606–1687), poet
 - John Waller (1917–1995), poet and anthologist
 - David Walliams (born 1971), children's writer and comedian
 - John Wallis (1616–1703), mathematician and writer
 - Martin Walls (born 1970), poet and journalist
 - Leo Walmsley (1892–1966), novelist and autobiographer
 - Horace Walpole (1717–1797), novelist and man of letters, The Castle of Otranto
 - Horatio Walpole (1678–1757), writer and politician
 - Hugh Walpole (1884–1941), novelist
 - Helen Walsh (born 1977), novelist
 - Jill Paton Walsh (1937–2020), novelist and children's writer
 - John Henry Walsh (also as Stonehenge, 1810–1888), field sports writer
 - Sheila Walsh (1928–2009), novelist
 - William Walsh (1663–1708), poet and critic
 - Guy Walters (born 1971), novelist and journalist
 - Hugh Walters (1910–1993), novelist
 - Minette Walters (born 1949), novelist
 - Vanessa Walters (born 1978), novelist and playwright
 - Amy Catherine Walton (1849–1939), children's writer
 - Izaak Walton (1593–1683), writer, The Compleat Angler
 - William Walwyn (1600–1681), pamphleteer
 - Humfrey Wanley (1672–1726), scholar and palaeographer
 - Nathaniel Wanley (1634–1680), writer and cleric
 - Henry Wansbrough (living), writer, Bible translator and RC monk
 - William Warburton (1698–1779), critic and bishop
 - Barbara Ward (1914–1981), economist and environmentalist
 - Chris Ward (born 1958), playwright
 - Edward Ward (1660 or 1667–1731), satirist
 - Keith Ward (born 1938), philosopher and cleric
 - Mrs. Humphry Ward (born Mary Augusta Arnold, 1851–1920), novelist
 - Robert Ward (fl. 1611), AV translator and cleric
 - Robert Plumer Ward (1765–1846), lawyer and novelist
 - Samuel Ward (1572–1643), scholar, AV translator and cleric
 - Sarah Ward (living), novelist and critic
 - Seth Ward (1617–1689), polemicist, astronomer and bishop
 - Thomas Humphry Ward (1845–1926), writer and journalist
 - William George Ward (1812–1882), theologian and mathematician
 - Terry Wardle (born 1944), children’s author
 - Marina Warner (born 1946), novelist and biographer
 - Rex Warner (1905–1986), novelist and translator
 - Richard Warner (c. 1713–1775), botanist and scholar
 - Richard Warner (1763–1853), antiquary and cleric
 - Sylvia Townsend Warner (1893–1978), novelist and poet
 - William Warner (c. 1558–1609), poet and translator
 - Mary Warnock (1924–2019), philosopher
 - Blanche Warre-Cornish (1844–1922), novelist and biographer
 - John Warren, Lord de Tabley (1835–1895), poet and botanist
 - Samuel Warren (1807–1877), novelist and barrister
 - Thomas Herbert Warren (1853–1930), scholar and poet
 - Tony Warren (1936–2016), screenwriter and novelist
 - Joseph Warton (1722–1800), poet and critic
 - Thomas Warton (c. 1688–1745), poet
 - Thomas Warton (1728–1790), Poet Laureate and critic
 - Robin Waterfield (born 1952), translator and classicist
 - Andrew Waterhouse (1958–2001), poet and environmentalist
 - Ellis Waterhouse (1905–1985), art historian and editor
 - Gilbert Waterhouse (1883–1916), poet and architect
 - Keith Waterhouse (1929–2009), novelist and screenwriter
 - Rachel Waterhouse (1923–2020), historian and activist
 - Sarah Waters (born 1966), novelist
 - Charles Waterton (1782–1865), naturalist and explorer
 - Denys Watkins-Pitchford (wrote as BB, 1905–1990), naturalist and children's writer
 - David Watmough (1926–2017), playwright and novelist
 - Colin Watson (1920–1983), novelist
 - E. L. Grant Watson (1885–1970), writer and biologist
 - James Watson (1936–2015), children's writer and playwright
 - Richard Watson (1781–1833), Methodist theologian
 - Richard Watson (1737–1816), writer and bishop
 - Rosamund Marriott Watson (wrote as Graham R. Tomson, 1860–1911), poet and garden writer
 - Thomas Watson (1555–1592), poet and translator
 - Thomas Watson (c. 1620–1686), writer and preacher
 - Victor Watson (born 1936), children's author and academic
 - William Watson (1858–1935), poet
 - Winifred Watson (1906–2002), novelist
 - Alan Watts (1915–1973), philosopher
 - Alaric Alexander Watts (1797–1864), poet and editor
 - Isaac Watts (1674–1748), hymnist
 - Theodore Watts-Dunton (1832–1914), critic, novelist and poet
 - Alec Waugh (1898–1981), novelist
 - Auberon Waugh (1939–2001), novelist and journalist
 - Edwin Waugh (1817–1890), dialect poet
 - Evelyn Waugh (1903–1966), novelist, travel writer and diarist, Brideshead Revisited
 - Arthur Way (1847–1930), classicist and translator
 - Camilla Way (born 1973), novelist and editor
 - Adrian Weale (born 1964), military writer
 - Frederic Weatherly (1848–1929), lyricist
 - Willoughby Weaving (1885–1977), poet
 - Clifford Webb (1895–1972), children's writer and illustrator
 - Mary Webb (1881–1927), novelist and poet
 - Philip Barker Webb (1793–1854), botanist and traveller
 - Sidney Webb (1859–1947), and Beatrice Webb (1858–1943), political economists
 - Augusta Webster (1837–1894), poet and playwright
 - John Webster (c. 1580–1634), playwright, The Duchess of Malfi
 - Camilla Wedgwood (1901–1955), anthropologist
 - C. V. Wedgwood (1910–1997), historian
 - Ernest Weekley (1865–1964), philologist
 - Samantha Weinberg (born 1967), novelist and travel writer
 - Arabella Weir (born 1957), writer and actor
 - Denton Welch (1915–1948), novelist, diarist and artist
 - Ronald Welch (real name Ronald Oliver Felton, 1909–1982), novelist and children's writer
 - Fay Weldon (1931–2023), novelist and screenwriter
 - Dorothy Wellesley (1889–1956), poet and editor
 - Charles Jeremiah Wells (c. 1798–1879), poet
 - H. G. Wells (1866–1946), novelist and critic, The War of the Worlds
 - John Wells (1936–1998), satirist
 - Leonard Welsted (1688–1747), poet
 - Louise Wener (born 1966), novelist and singer
 - Anne Wentworth (1629/1630 – post-1679), religious writer
 - Arnold Wesker (1932–2016), playwright
 - Charles Wesley (1707–1788), preacher and hymnist
 - John Wesley (1703–1791), theologian and cleric
 - Mary Wesley (1912–2002), novelist
 - Samuel Wesley (1662–1735), poet and polemicist
 - Samuel Wesley (1690 or 1691–1739), poet and cleric
 - Arthur Graeme West (1891–1917), diarist and poet
 - Gilbert West (1703–1756), poet and translator
 - Jane West (wrote as Prudentia Homespun, 1758–1852), novelist, writer and poet
 - Kate West (1957–), author
 - Paul West (1930–2015), novelist and poet
 - Rebecca West (real name Cicely Isabel Fairfield, 1892–1983), novelist and travel writer
 - Robert Westall (1929–1993), children's writer
 - William Bury Westall (1834–1903), novelist
 - Charles Molloy Westmacott (also as Bernard Blackmantle, c. 1788–1868), writer and journalist
 - Joyce Wethered (1901–1997), golf and gardening writer
 - Robert Wever (fl. 1550), poet
 - Stanley J. Weyman (1855–1928), novelist
 - Anne Wharton (1659–1685), poet and playwright
 - George Wharton (1618–1681), pamphleteer and astrologer
 - Goodwin Wharton (1653–1704), autobiographer
 - Gordon Wharton (1929–2011), poet
 - Henry Wharton (1664–1695), writer, biographer and cleric
 - Michael Wharton (wrote as Peter Simple, 1913–2006), humorist
 - Mary Whateley (Mary Darwall, also as Harriet Airey, 1738–1835), poet and playwright
 - Richard Whateley (1787–1863), theologian, economist and archbishop
 - Anne Wheathill (fl. 1584), poet and prayer writer
 - Dennis Wheatley (1897–1977), thriller writer
 - Ethel Rolt Wheeler (1869–1958), poet, journalist and essayist
 - Hugh Wheeler (1912–1987), novelist, playwright and screenwriter
 - Mortimer Wheeler (1890–1976), archaeologist
 - John Wheeler-Bennett (1902–1975), analyst and historian
 - Francis Wheen (born 1957), biographer and journalist
 - Eric Whelpton (1894–1981), travel writer
 - George Whetstone (c. 1544 – c. 1587), writer and playwright
 - Charles Whibley (1859–1930), critic and writer
 - Dorothy Whipple (1893–1966), novelist
 - Laurence Whistler (1912–2000), poet and engraver
 - Evelyn Whitaker (1844–1929), children's writer
 - Antonia White (real name Eirine Botting, 1899–1980), novelist, playwright and children's writer
 - Dorothy White (c. 1630–1686), Quaker pamphleteer and preacher
 - Fred M. White (1859–1935), science-fiction and disaster novelist
 - Gilbert White (1720–1795), naturalist and cleric, The Natural History of Selborne
 - Hale White (wrote as Mark Rutherford, 1831–1913), writer
 - Henry Kirke White (1785–1806), poet and hymnist
 - Michael White (writes as Sam Fisher, living), writer
 - T. H. White, (1906–1964), children's writer and poet, The Once and Future King
 - Thomas White (also as Blackloe, 1593–1676), theologian and RC priest
 - Tony White (born 1964), novelist and travel writer
 - George Whitefield (1714–1770), theologian and preacher
 - Alfred North Whitehead (1861–1947), mathematician and philosopher
 - Charles Whitehead (1804–1862), poet and novelist
 - George Whitehead (1636–1723), Quaker preacher and writer
 - William Whitehead (1715–1785), Poet Laureate and playwright
 - Richard Whiteing (wrote as Whyte Thorne, 1840–1928), novelist and journalist
 - Dorothy Whitelock (1901–1982), historian
 - Bulstrode Whitelocke (1605–1675), chronicler
 - Hugh Whitemore (1936–2018), playwright and screenwriter
 - Charles Whiting (1926–2007), novelist and military historian
 - David Whitley (born 1985), YA novelist
 - Geoffrey Whitney (c. 1548 – c. 1601), poet
 - Isabella Whitney (fl. 1567–1573), poet
 - James Pounder Whitney (1857–1939), historian
 - Gerald James Whitrow (1912–2000), cosmologist
 - Crispin Whittell (born 1969), playwright
 - Ian Whybrow (born 1941), children's writer
 - Thomas Whythorne (1528–1595), poet, autobiographer and composer
 - Frederick Wicks (1840–1910), novelist and inventor
 - Susan Wicks (born 1947), poet and novelist
 - Ally Wilkes (living), novelist and short story writer
 - Jeremiah Holmes Wiffen (1792–1836), poet and scholar
 - Clare Wigfall (born 1976), story writer
 - William Wilberforce (1759–1833), religious writer and reformer
 - John Wilbye (1574–1638), madrigalist
 - Patrick Wilde (living), playwright and screenwriter
 - Peter Wildeblood (1923–1999), writer and journalist
 - John Wilkes (1725–1797), radical
 - Charles Wilkins (1749–1836), orientalist and translator
 - George Wilkins (fl. 1607), playwright and pamphleteer
 - Harold T. Wilkins (1891–1960), writer and historian
 - John Wilkins (1614–1672), natural philosopher, writer and bishop
 - Vaughan Wilkins (1890–1959), novelist and journalist
 - John Wilkinson (born 1953), poet
 - John Gardner Wilkinson (1797–1875), writer, traveller and scholar
 - Paul Wilkinson (1937–2011), political writer
 - Geoffrey Willans (1911–1958), writer and journalist, (with Ronald Searle) Nigel Molesworth
 - Barbara Willard (1909–1994), children's writer and novelist
 - Aeneas Francon Williams (1886–1971), writer, poet, missionary, chaplain
 - Alfred Williams (1877–1930), poet
 - Anna Williams (1706–1783), poet
 - Bernard Williams (1929–2003), philosopher
 - Charles Williams (1886–1945), novelist, poet and scholar
 - Charlie Williams (born 1971), novelist
 - Eric Williams (1911–1983) WW2 writer
 - Frederick Smeeton Williams (1829–1886), railway writer
 - Helen Maria Williams (1761/1762–1827), poet, translator and radical
 - Hugo Williams (born 1942), poet and travel writer
 - Isaac Williams (1802–1865), writer, poet and cleric
 - John Francon Williams (1854–1911), writer, geographer, historian, journalist, editor
 - John Williams (1761–1818), poet and satirist
 - John Hartley Williams (1942–2014), poet
 - Jules Williams writer, director and producer
 - Nicholas Williams (born 1942), philologist
 - Nigel Williams (born 1948), novelist, playwright and screenwriter
 - Paul Williams (born 1967), writer on subcultures
 - Paul Andrew Williams (born 1973), screenwriter and film director
 - Robina Williams (living), novelist
 - Rowan Williams (born 1950), writer and archbishop
 - Sarah Williams (1837–1868), poet
 - Timothy Williams (born 1946), crime novelist
 - William Mattieu Williams (1820–1892), writer on science, education and politics
 - Alice Muriel Williamson (1869–1933), novelist
 - Charles Norris Williamson (1859–1920), novelist and motoring writer
 - Henry Williamson (1895–1977), novelist, Tarka the Otter
 - Kenneth Williamson (1914–1977), ornithologist
 - Timothy Williamson (born 1955), philosopher
 - Browne Willis (1682–1760), writer and antiquary
 - Paul Willis (living), sociologist
 - Robert Willis (engineer) (1800–1875), architectural writer and cleric
 - Ted Willis (1914–1992), playwright and screenwriter
 - Tim Willocks (living), novelist, screenwriter and psychiatrist
 - Francis Willughby or Willoughby (1635–1672), ornithologist
 - Clive Wilmer (born 1945), poet
 - Val Wilmer (born 1941), music writer and photographer
 - John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester (1647–1680), satirical poet
 - A. N. Wilson (born 1950), novelist and biographer
 - Andrew Wilson (born 1961), history and current affairs writer
 - Angus Wilson (1913–1991), novelist
 - Bryan R. Wilson (1926–2004), sociologist
 - Colin Wilson (1931–2013), novelist and philosopher
 - Harriette Wilson (1786–1845), courtesan and memoirist
 - Herbert Wrigley Wilson (1866–1940) naval historian
 - Horace Hayman Wilson (1786–1860), orientalist and translator
 - Ian Wilson (born 1941), religious and science writer
 - J. Dover Wilson (1881–1969), Shakespearean and critic
 - Jacqueline Wilson (born 1945), children's writer
 - John Wilson (1527–1596), playwright and translator
 - Leslie Wilson (living), novelist and children's writer
 - Richard Wilson (born 1950), Shakespearean scholar
 - Robert Wilson (fl. 1572–1600), playwright
 - Robert Wilson (born 1957), novelist
 - Sandy Wilson (1924–2014), lyricist and composer, The Boy Friend
 - T. P. Cameron Wilson (1888–1918), poet
 - Thomas Wilson (1524–1581), rhetorician and diplomat
 - Thomas Wilson (1773–1858), dialect poet
 - Jane Wilson-Howarth (aka Jane Wilson, b. 1954) travel and health writer
 - R. D. Wingfield (1928–2007), novelist and radio dramatist
 - Catherine Winkworth (1827–1878), translator and hymnist
 - Jacqueline Winspear (born 1955), novelist
 - Gerrard Winstanley (1609–1676), pamphleteer
 - Stephen Winsten (real name Samuel Weinstein, 1893–1991), writer
 - John Strange Winter (real name Henrietta Eliza Vaughan Stannard 1856–1911), novelist
 - Jeanette Winterson (born 1959), novelist
 - Jane Wiseman (c. 1682–1717), poet and playwright
 - George Wither (1588–1667), poet and satirist
 - P.G. Wodehouse (1881–1975), novelist and playwright, Jeeves
 - John Wolcot (wrote as Peter Pindar, 1738–1819), poet and satirist
 - Lucien Wolf (1857–1930), historian
 - Humbert Wolfe (1885–1940), poet and translator
 - Ronald Wolfe (1922–2011), TV scriptwriter
 - Jonathan Wolff (born 1959), philosopher
 - Mary Wollstonecraft (1759–1797), polemicist and novelist, A Vindication of the Rights of Woman
 - Philip Womack (living), novelist
 - Anthony Wood (1632–1695), antiquary
 - Christopher Wood (wrote as Timothy Lea, 1935–2015), novelist and screenwriter
 - David Wood (born 1944), children's playwright, screenwriter and actor
 - Ellen Wood (Mrs. Henry Wood, 1814–1887), novelist
 - Robert Wood (c. 1622–1685), mathematician and translator
 - Sara Wood (living), novelist and story writer
 - Thomas Wood (1892–1950), writer and composer
 - George Woodcock (1912–1995), poet and thinker
 - James Woodforde (1740–1803), diarist and cleric
 - Walter Bradford Woodgate (wrote as Wat Bradwood, 1841–1920), writer on rowing, oarsman and barrister
 - Cecil Woodham-Smith (1896–1977), historian and biographer
 - Martin Woodhouse (1932–2011), novelist and screenwriter
 - Richard Woodman (born 1944), novelist and mariner
 - Charles Woodmason (c. 1720–1789), diarist, poet and cleric
 - Margaret Louisa Woods (1856–1945), novelist and poet
 - Anthony Woodville or Wydeville, Earl Rivers (c. 1440–1483) translator
 - Gerard Woodward (born 1961), novelist and poet
 - John Woodward (1665–1728), naturalist and antiquary
 - Emily Woof (born 1967), playwright, screenwriter and actress
 - Leonard Woolf (1880–1969), writer and editor
 - Virginia Woolf (1882–1941), novelist and biographer, To the Lighthouse
 - Thomas Woolner (1825–1892) poet and sculptor
 - Christopher Wordsworth (1807–1885), poet, classicist and bishop
 - Dorothy Wordsworth (1771–1855), diarist and poet,
 - William Wordsworth (1770–1850), poet, The Prelude
 - Frank Worrall (living), sports writer
 - Philip Stanhope Worsley (1835–1866), poet, translator and cleric
 - T.C. Worsley (1907–1977), writer and critic
 - Henry Wotton (1568–1639), poet and translator
 - Nathaniel Wraxall (1751–1831), memoirist and political writer
 - P. C. Wren (1875–1941), novelist
 - Chandos Wren-Hoskyns (1812–1876), agricultural writer and landowner
 - Crispin Wright (born 1942), philosopher
 - David Wright (1920–1994), poet, translator and biographer
 - Derrick Wright (born 1928), military historian
 - Edward Wright (1561–1615), mathematician
 - Fred Wright (born 1947), historian and theologian
 - Joseph Wright (1855–1930), philologist and lexicographer
 - Kit Wright (born 1944), poet, children's writer and anthologist
 - N. T. Wright (also as Tom Wright, b. 1948), writer and bishop
 - Patrick Wright (living), historian and broadcaster
 - Richard Wright (Unitarian) (1764–1836), writer and Unitarian minister
 - Thomas Wright (1810–1877), writer and antiquary
 - William Aldis Wright (1831–1914), writer and editor
 - Mary Wroth (1587–1651/1653), writer and poet
 - Andrea Wulf (born 1972), biographer and garden writer
 - Arthur Wyatt (living), writer and editor
 - George Wyatt (1550–1623), writer and biographer
 - Stephen Wyatt (born 1948), playwright and adapter
 - Thomas Wyatt (1503–1542), poet and translator
 - Woodrow Wyatt (1918–1997), diarist and politician
 - William Wycherley (c. 1640–1715), playwright, The Country Wife
 - Robert Wydow (c. 1446–1505), poet, musician and cleric
 - John Wycliffe (mid–1320s – 1384), theologian and Bible translator
 - John Wyndham (also as John Beynon, 1903–1969), novelist, The Day of the Triffids
 - D. B. Wyndham-Lewis (wrote as Timothy Shy, 1891–1969), humorist
 - Peter Wynne-Thomas (1934–2021), cricket writer
 
X
Y
- Jane Yardley (living), novelist
 - William Yarrell (1784–1856), naturalist
 - Dornford Yates (real name Cecil William Mercer, 1885–1960), novelist
 - Edmund Yates (1831–1894), novelist and playwright
 - Ann Yearsley (1753–1806), poet, playwright and novelist
 - Victor Maslin Yeates (1897–1934), writer and pilot
 - R. J. Yeatman (1897–1968), humorist, 1066 and All That (with W. C. Sellar)
 - Tamar Yellin (living), novelist and story writer
 - Theresa Yelverton (originally Maria Theresa Longworth, 1833–1881), travel writer
 - Charlotte Mary Yonge (1823–1901), novelist
 - Walter Yonge of Colyton (1579–1649), diarist and lawyer
 - Edward of York (c. 1373–1415), translator and courtier
 - Barbara Yorke (born 1951), historian
 - Margaret Yorke (1924–2012), crime writer
 - Matthew Yorke (born 1958), novelist and editor
 - Arthur Young (1741–1820), writer and economist
 - E. H. Young (1880–1949), novelist and children's writer
 - Edward Young (1683–1765), poet
 - F. E. Mills Young (1875–1954), novelist
 - Francis Brett Young (1884–1954), novelist
 - G. M. Young (1882–1959), historian
 - Gary Young (living), screenwriter
 - Gavin Young (1928–2001), travel writer and journalist
 - Hilton Young, Lord Kennet (1879–1960), writer and politician
 - Robert J. C. Young (born 1950), thinker and historian
 - Thomas Young (1773–1829), polymath
 - Toby Young (born 1963), journalist and playwright
 
Z
- Helen Zahavi (born 1966), novelist
 - Adam Zamoyski (born 1949), biographer and historian
 - Israel Zangwill (1864–1926), novelist and playwright
 - Louis Zangwill (1869–1938), novelist
 - Oliver Zangwill (1913–1987), psychologist
 - Benjamin Zephaniah (born 1958), dub poet
 - Philip Ziegler (1929–2023), biographer and historian
 - Alfred Eckhard Zimmern (1879–1957), classicist and historian
 - Alice Zimmern (1855–1939), writer and translator
 - Helen Zimmern (1846–1934), writer and translator