In 1954 a new periodical was given the title the
London Magazine under the editorship of
John Lehmann, who largely continued the tradition of his previous magazine
New Writing. It was endorsed by
T. S. Eliot as a non-university-based periodical that would "boldly assume the existence of a public interested in serious literature".
Susan Sontag,
Eugene Ionesco,
Sylvia Plath,
Gabriel García Márquez,
Hilary Mantel and Annie Ernaux were among the iconic writers who contributed to the magazine during this period. In 1961 the magazine changed hands and came under the editorship of Lehmann's fellow poet and critic
Alan Ross. Publication continued until Ross's death in 2001. Under both Lehmann and Ross the magazine was published by
Chatto & Windus. In 2001 it was relaunched by Christopher Arkell, who appointed the poet and literary critic
Sebastian Barker as editor. Barker retired in early 2008 and Sara-Mae Tuson took over. In July 2009 Arkell sold the magazine to
Burhan Al-Chalabi, who is now the publisher.
The London Magazine has been relaunched under the current editorship. It is published six times a year. It publishes both emerging and established writers from around the world. ==References==