An early use of the building in fiction was the novel,
The Bachelor of the Albany (1847) by
Marmion Wilard Savage. Still earlier is the hero of
Benjamin Disraeli’s novel
Sybil (1845), Charles Egremont, who lives there; he has a portrait by
Cristofano Allori hung over his fireplace halfway through the book. In
Dorothy Sayers' novel
Clouds of Witness (1926), Dennis Cathcart, whose death is central to the story, is said to "have a room in Albany." Mr Fascination Fledgeby, a
moneylender in
Charles Dickens' novel
Our Mutual Friend (1865), is described as living there. Several scenes from the book take place in his apartment. In the novel
The Picture of Dorian Gray (1890) by
Oscar Wilde, Lord Fermor, the uncle of the character Lord Henry Wotton, resides in Albany. In Oscar Wilde's play
The Importance of Being Earnest (1895), the character John (Jack) Worthing has a set at Albany (number B.4), where he lives while staying in London under the assumed name of Ernest.
A. J. Raffles, the gentleman burglar created by
E. W. Hornung who first appeared in "
The Ides of March" (1898), lived at Albany, as did the adventurer
Lord John Roxton of
Arthur Conan Doyle's novel
The Lost World (1912), and Roger Sheringham, the amateur detective in the works of
Anthony Berkeley Cox who first appeared in
The Layton Court Mystery (1925). In
G. K. Chesterton's
Father Brown Stories, in "The Queer Feet" (1910), the character Mr Audrey "[looks] like a mild, self-indulgent bachelor, with rooms in the Albany -- which he was". In the comic short story "
Uncle Fred Flits By" (1935) by
P. G. Wodehouse, the young gentleman
Pongo Twistleton resides in Albany. In
The Foundling (1948), a novel by
Georgette Heyer, Captain Gideon Ware of the Life Guards rents a set of chambers at Albany. In the film
Kind Hearts and Coronets (1949), Louis Mazzini takes a small set at Albany as he moves up the social ladder. In the James Bond novel
Moonraker by
Ian Fleming (1955), Max Meyer, the bridge partner of Sir Hugo Drax, was said to live in Albany.
Simon Raven's
Alms for Oblivion novels (including 1974's
Bring Forth the Body) feature Somerset Lloyd-James, a politician and resident of Albany. In
Graham Greene's
The Human Factor (1978), Dr Percival resides at D.6. In the Major Harry Maxim novels by
Gavin Lyall, George Harbinger, Harry's boss, who first appears in
The Secret Servant (1980), has an apartment at Albany where he lives with his spouse, Annette. In
Susan Howatch's Starbridge series, Perry Palmer lives in Albany. In
Julian Fellowes' novel
Belgravia (2016), Mr John Bellasis resides in an apartment at Albany. ==Tenants==