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Granta

Granta is a literary magazine and publisher in the United Kingdom whose mission centres on its "belief in the power and urgency of the story, both in fiction and non-fiction, and the story's supreme ability to describe, illuminate and make real."[1] In 2007, The Observer stated: "In its blend of memoirs and photojournalism, and in its championing of contemporary realist fiction, Granta has its face pressed firmly against the window, determined to witness the world."[2]

For other uses, see Granta (disambiguation).

Editor

Thomas Meaney

Quarterly

23,000

1889 (1889)

Relaunch: 1 September 1979

United Kingdom

London

English

Granta has published twenty-seven laureates of the Nobel Prize in Literature.[1] Literature published by Granta regularly win prizes such as the Forward Prize, T. S. Eliot Prize, Pushcart Prize and more.[3]

Rebirth[edit]

During the 1970s the publication, faced with financial difficulties and increasing levels of student apathy,[6] was rescued by a group of interested postgraduates, including writer and producer Jonathan Levi, journalist Bill Buford, and Peter de Bolla (now Professor of Cultural History and Aesthetics at Cambridge University). In 1979, it was successfully relaunched as a magazine of "new writing",[9] with both writers and audience drawn from the world beyond Cambridge. Bill Buford (who wrote Among the Thugs originally as a project for the journal) was the editor for its first 16 years in the new incarnation. Ian Jack succeeded him, editing Granta from 1995 until 2007.


Since 2003, Granta has been published in Spain in Spanish.[10][11] In April 2007, it was announced that Jason Cowley, editor of the Observer Sport Monthly, would succeed Jack as editor in September 2007. Cowley redesigned and relaunched the magazine; he also launched a new website. In September 2008, he left when he was selected as editor of the New Statesman.


Alex Clark, a former deputy literary editor of The Observer, succeeded him as the first female editor of Granta.[12] In late May 2009, Clark left the publication[13] and John Freeman, the American editor, took over the magazine.[13]


As of 2023, Granta's circulation is 23,000.[14] In the 164th issue Sigrid Rausing, who had served as editor since 2013, announced she would turn over editorship to Thomas Meaney with the Autumn issue of 2023.[15]

Ownership[edit]

In 1994, Rea Hederman, owner of The New York Review of Books, took a controlling stake in the magazine.[16] In October 2005, control of the magazine was bought by Sigrid Rausing.[17]

Granta Books[edit]

In 1989, then-editor Buford founded Granta Books.[18] Granta's stated aim for its book publishing imprint is to publish work that "stimulates, inspires, addresses difficult questions, and examines intriguing periods of history." Owner Sigrid Rausing has been vocal about her goal to maintain these standards for both the magazine and the book imprint, telling the Financial Times, "[Granta] will not publish any books that could not potentially be extracted in the magazine. We use the magazine as a yardstick for our books.... We are no longer going to look at what sells as a sort of argument, because it seemed to me that we were in danger of losing our inventiveness about what we wanted to do."[19] Authors recently published by Granta Books include Michael Collins, Simon Gray, Anna Funder, Tim Guest, Caspar Henderson, Louise Stern and Olga Tokarczuk.


When Rausing purchased Granta, she brought with her the publishing imprint Portobello Books, founded in 2005; as of January 2019 the Portobello Books imprint was closed, with all its contracted authors therefter published under the Granta Books imprint.[20] Granta Books are distributed by The Book Service in the UK.[21] Granta Books are distributed by Ingram Publisher Services in the US.[22]

List of Granta issues

The Best of Granta Reportage. Granta Books in association with Penguin Books. 1994.  978-0-14-014071-2.

ISBN

Granta official website

Granta Books official website

Finding aid to Granta records at Columbia University. Rare Book & Manuscript Library.