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 June/July 2014 issue features Peter Abbs on William Blake and the Forging of the Self, Suzi Feay on re-reading Leon Garfield, Edward Lucie-Smith’s research into his family ancestry, Holly Luhning on My London, Norman Buller on T. S. Eliot, Ros Barber on Shakespeare, Jeffrey Meyers on Sylvia Plath, and Tony Roberts on Edmund Wilson and Sir Isaiah Berlin.
New short stories by David Frankel and Michael Humfrey.
This issue features a range of poets including Suad Ali, Emily Bilman, John F. Deane, Pavol Janik, Yahia Lababidi, and Patricia McCarthy. Reviewers include Belinda Cooke, Geoffrey Heptonstall, Terry Kelly, Steven Matthews, Derwent May, and Michael Thomas.
Our June/July 2014 issue features Peter Abbs on William Blake and the Forging of the Self, Suzi Feay on re-reading Leon Garfield, Edward Lucie-Smith’s research into his family ancestry, Holly Luhning on My London, Norman Buller on T. S. Eliot, Ros Barber on Shakespeare, Jeffrey Meyers on Sylvia Plath, and Tony Roberts on Edmund Wilson and Sir Isaiah Berlin.
New short stories by David Frankel and Michael Humfrey.
This issue features a range of poets including Suad Ali, Emily Bilman, John F. Deane, Pavol Janik, Yahia Lababidi, and Patricia McCarthy. Reviewers include Belinda Cooke, Geoffrey Heptonstall, Terry Kelly, Steven Matthews, Derwent May, and Michael Thomas.