2006 saw the launch of "Battersea Girl" a partly fictionalised account of Knight's grandmother and a biography of Chelsea, Dundee and Aberdeen footballer Charlie Cooke.
[1] King and Knight edited the company's first title "The Special Ones", a collection of memories and opinions of Chelsea fans and from 2007 books by vintage authors Gerald Kersh, James Curtis, Robert Westerby, Simon Blumenfeld, John Sommerfield and Alan Sillitoe were republished.
[4] Knight wrote the introduction to London Books 2014 release of There Ain't No Justice by James Curtis, first published in 1938 and filmed in 1939.
Knight and John King became friends with Sillitoe and met up regularly in the last ten years of his life at The Lamb and Flag pub near Covent Garden.
In 2017, he wrote the afterword to the London Books' reissue of the Chelsea, Stoke, Arsenal and England maverick footballer Alan Hudson's autobiography The Working Man's Ballet.
"Nefarious-My Life In Crime" written with former armed robber and Kray family and Joey Pyle associate Ronnie Field was released in 2024 following serialisations in the "Sunday Times" and the "Sun".