The London Magazine is England’s oldest literary periodical, with a history stretching back to 1732. The pages of the Magazine have played host to a wide range of canonical writers, from Percy Bysshe Shelley, William Hazlitt and John Keats in the 18th-century, to T.S. Eliot, W.H. Auden and Evelyn Waugh in the early 20th-century. Today – reinvigorated for a new century – the Magazine’s essence remains unchanged: it is a home for the best writing and an indispensable feature on the British literary landscape.
Our August/September 2018 issue features Grey Gowrie on Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes, Horatio Morpurgo on the Cold War, Tyne O’Connell on My London, Robert Wilton on the Women of Kosovo, Jonathan McAloon on William Tillyer, alongside Frank Armstrong on the Hemispheric drift, Will Stone on Europe’s old bookshops, and Alistair Lexden on Winston Churchill and Neville Chamberlain.
Poetry by Hugo Williams, Owen O’Sullivan, Paula Bohince, Will Vigar, Anthony Gardner, Frank Dullaghan, Sharon Black, George Tardios, Sara Elena Rossetti, Angela Kirby and Davina Allison. This issue features short fiction by Ian Tew. Reviewers include Andrew Lambirth, Jeffrey Meyers, Ellen Jones, Conor Carville, Stuart Walton, Andrew Lambirth and Michael O’Neill.
Our August/September 2018 issue features Grey Gowrie on Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes, Horatio Morpurgo on the Cold War, Tyne O’Connell on My London, Robert Wilton on the Women of Kosovo, Jonathan McAloon on William Tillyer, alongside Frank Armstrong on the Hemispheric drift, Will Stone on Europe’s old bookshops, and Alistair Lexden on Winston Churchill and Neville Chamberlain.
Poetry by Hugo Williams, Owen O’Sullivan, Paula Bohince, Will Vigar, Anthony Gardner, Frank Dullaghan, Sharon Black, George Tardios, Sara Elena Rossetti, Angela Kirby and Davina Allison. This issue features short fiction by Ian Tew. Reviewers include Andrew Lambirth, Jeffrey Meyers, Ellen Jones, Conor Carville, Stuart Walton, Andrew Lambirth and Michael O’Neill.