• 1768 – John MacMurray, a former lieutenant of the Marines, buys a bookselling business at 32
Fleet Street. He changes his name to Murray and uses his naval contacts to build up a thriving business. • 1806 – The first bestseller,
A New System of Domestic Cookery, by
Maria Rundell, is published, with a second edition two years later. • 1809 – The influential periodical
Quarterly Review is published • 1811 – ''
Childe Harold's Pilgrimage'' by
Lord Byron • 1812 – John Murray moves to 50
Albemarle Street, its home for the next 191 years • 1815 –
Jane Austen decides she would like to move to Murray with
Emma, published in 1815 • 1816 –
Coleridge moves to John Murray for
Christabel and Other Poems, which included
Kubla Khan • 1830 – First part of the three-volume
Principles of Geology by
Charles Lyell • 1836 – The first guide books, ''
Murray's Handbooks'', were published by
John Murray III • 1849 – A groundbreaking observational study on the
Sikh people is published. This comprehensive account arguably foreshadowed the
British Empire's first large-scale attempt at using the scientific method to civilise populations; this methodological approach later became known as
Eugenics. • 1857 –
David Livingstone's
Missionary Travels – one of the many great 19th-century publications of exploration from John Murray • 1859 –
On the Origin of Species by
Charles Darwin • 1859 – First self-help book ''Samuel Smiles's Self Help'' • 1863 –
Henry Walter Bates's
The Naturalist on the River Amazons • 1865 –
Narrative of an Expedition to the Zambesi and its Tributaries; and of the Discovery of the Lakes Shirwa and Nyassa. 1858–1864 by David and Charles Livingstone • 1871 –
Edward Whymper,
Scrambles Amongst the Alps in the Years 1860–69, the first ascent of the
Matterhorn in 1865 • 1891 – Edward Whymper,
Travels Amongst the Great Andes of the Equator, two volumes recording ascents in the Ecuadorian Andes of
Chimborazo,
Cotopaxi,
Cayambe, and other Andean Peaks • 1900 -
Lavengro: The Scholar-The Gypsy-The Priest, by
George Borrow; a new edition appeared in March 1900, which was reprinted in July 1902 and reprinted in May 1904. • 1912 –
Behind The Night Light by
Nancy Price was published in June, which was reprinted in June 1912, September 1912 and January 1913. • 1921 –
An Etymological Dictionary of Modern English by
Ernest Weekley • 1934 –
Alpine Pilgrimage by
Julius Kugy (1st edition (English), 1934), Klugy's literary masterpiece on the
Julian Alps of Slovenia as translated by H. E. G. Tyndale (Henry Edmund Guise Tyndale) • 1938 –
Daniele Varè's biography
The Laughing Diplomat • 1958 –
John Betjeman's
Collected Poems is published and has sold over two million copies to date • 1967 – Last issue of the
Quarterly Review is published • 1969 – The first TV tie-in,
Kenneth Clark's
Civilisation, is published • 1975 –
Ruth Prawer Jhabvala's
Heat and Dust wins the
Booker Prize • 1977 – The "greatest travel book of the twentieth century",
A Time of Gifts by
Patrick Leigh Fermor, is published • 2002 – John Murray leaves family hands after seven generations • 2002 –
Peacemakers by
Margaret MacMillan wins the
Samuel Johnson Prize, the
Duff Cooper Prize and the
Hessell-Tiltman Prize • 2003 – The first new acquisition since the company became part of Hodder Headline (now Hachette),
A Million Little Pieces by
James Frey, becomes a perennial and controversial bestseller • 2004 – Rebirth of the John Murray fiction list with
Neil Jordan's
Shade • 2005 –
Beasts of No Nation by
Uzodinma Iweala wins
John Llewellyn Rhys Prize • 2007 –
Mister Pip by
Lloyd Jones becomes a global bestseller, wins the
Commonwealth Writers' Prize and is shortlisted for the Booker Prize • 2008 –
Amitav Ghosh launches his epic
Ibis trilogy with
Sea of Poppies, shortlisted for the Booker Prize • 2008 –
Down River by
John Hart wins
Edgar Award for Best Novel • 2008 –
The Secret Life of Words by
Henry Hitchings wins the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize • 2009 –
The Last Child by John Hart wins
CWA Ian Fleming Steel Dagger/ITV Thriller of the Year Award, and the Edgar Award for Best Novel • 2009 –
Martyr by
Rory Clements, special mention in
CWA Ellis Peters Historical Fiction Award • 2010 –
Revenger by Rory Clements wins CWA Ellis Peters Historical Fiction Award • 2010 –
Wait For Me! by
Deborah Devonshire is shortlisted for the
British Book Awards Biography of the Year • 2011 –
Mistaken by Neil Jordan wins
Irish Book of the Year Award • 2012 –
Icelight by
Aly Monroe wins CWA Ellis Peters Historical Fiction Award • 2012 –
Patrick Leigh Fermor: An Adventure by
Artemis Cooper is shortlisted for the Costa Biography Award, the Waterstone's Book of the Year Award and the National Book Awards Biography of the Year • 2016 –
The Glorious Heresies by
Lisa McInerney wins the
Women's Prize for Fiction • 2020 –
The Stonemason: A History of Building Britain by Andrew Ziminski • 2022 – The crime fiction and thriller imprint Baskerville is launched • 2024 – John Murray publishes its first classics list of 10 titles, including works by Jane Austen and
David Attenborough ==Book series==