Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Pearson's Magazine

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Frequency
  
Monthly

First issue
  
1896

Publisher
  
C. Arthur Pearson

Final issue — Number
  
November 1939 527

Pearson's Magazine

Editor
  
C. Arthur Pearson (1896–1899) Percy W. Everett (1900–1911) Philip O'Farrell (1912–1919) John Reed Wade (1920–1939) W.E. Johns (1939)

Company
  
Pearson Publishing Company

Pearson's Magazine was a monthly periodical which first appeared in Britain in 1896. It specialised in speculative literature, political discussion, often of a socialist bent, and the arts. Its contributors included Upton Sinclair, George Bernard Shaw, Maxim Gorky, George Griffith, H. G. Wells, Dornford Yates and E. Phillips Oppenheim, many of whose short stories and novelettes first saw publication in Pearson's.

Contents

It was the first British periodical to publish a crossword puzzle, in February 1922.

History

British publisher C. Arthur Pearson established and served as the editor of the monthly magazine from 1896 to 1899. He removed himself as editor as blindness set in but continued as its publisher. Succeeding editors included -

  • Percy W. Everett (1900–1911)
  • Philip O'Farrell (1912–1919)
  • John Reed Wade (January 1920–April 1939)
  • W.E. Johns (May 1939–November 1939).
  • The magazine ceased publication in November 1939 after 527 issues.

    A like-for-like US version of Pearson's appeared in 1899. It eventually diverged into more US-oriented authors and separate editorial oversight, which included -

  • Arthur W. Little (to August 1916)
  • Frank Harris (September 1916 – 1923)
  • Alexander Marky (1922–April 1925).
  • The United States version was published by J. J. Little until the title folded in April 1925 after a total run of 314 issues.

    Notable serials

  • George Griffith's The Angel of the Revolution
  • C. J. Cutcliffe Hyne's The Lost Continent: The Story of Atlantis (July–December 1899)
  • H. G. Wells' The War of the Worlds (April–December 1897).
  • H. G. Wells' The Sea Lady (1901)
  • References

    Pearson's Magazine Wikipedia