This list is a work in progress, and we invite all those interested to help us improve it. It is intended to provide basic information about all the English-language magazines of literary and artistic interest operating during the period from 1890 to 1922. We stop at 1922 for copyright reasons, with the intellectual justification that we are interested in the rise of modernism, which may be considered complete by that date.
The list may be downloaded or used in any way scholars and students of modernism wish to use it. But we have a specific project in mind for those who are in a position to assist us. The MJP exists mainly to provide digital editions of magazines from this period, with full editorial support. To that end, we have indicated on this list the journals we consider most suitable for digitization (in red type), and others that we consider interesting but would put second in order of priority (in blue).
In the course of our work we have discovered what we call the hole in the archive — by which we mean the gap left when our libraries bound up these periodicals and discarded the advertising pages that were in them — a virtually universal practice. Our catalogues often indicate that they have extensive runs of periodicals, but what they actually have are bound copies without the advertising. This means that, for those of us who see advertising as a significant part of modernism, these holdings are incomplete, no matter what the catalogues may say.
The MJP includes advertising in its digital editions, which means that we require original issues in order to perform this work and make these texts available to you. Therefore, we ask you to take this list and do three things with it.
We work with cooperating libraries in making our editions, and we will be happy to work with yours, if they have original issues of a journal of interest. Remember, please, that we cannot consider journals published after 1922, though we can consider a partial run up to that year.
Note: Mass magazines begin at the end of the nineteenth century. Little magazines appear in reaction to them. Earlier magazines are usually classified on our list as "inter" for intermediate. Some highly specialized magazines (like The Dickensian) have not been included. Sources consulted in compiling the list include Mott's A History of American Magazines (all five volumes), Peterson's Magazines in the Twentieth Century, Hoffman, Allen, and Ulrich's The Little Magazine, Sullivan's British Literary Magazines: 1837-1914, and 1914-1984, and Chielens's American Literary Magazines: the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Century, American Literary Magazines: The Twentieth Century, and The Literary Journal in America: 1900-1950, as well as Mike Ashley's The Age of the Storytellers: British Popular Fiction Magazines 1880-1950. This list is far from perfection, but it is a start, and with your help we can make it better.
We have now (December, 2006) received considerable help from Brad Evans at Rutgers, who has added a large number of very small magazines (bibelots) to this list. We hope others will follow Brad's example and send us information about journals published during our time period (1890-1922) that we can add to this list.
Please send suggestions and information to:
Robert_Scholes@brown.edu
| name | country | type | periodicity | date started | date ended | notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Edinburgh Review | GB | inter | quarterly | 1802 | 1929 | In ProQuest digital archive |
| The Quarterly Review | GB | inter | quarterly | 1809 | 1962 | |
| The North American Review | US | inter | various | 1815 | 1939 | A Major American literary journal; declined in the 20th cent.; in ProQuest digital archive |
| Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine | GB | inter | monthly | 1817 | 1980 | Important in both Victorian and Modern Britain, publishing George Eliot, Conrad, Buchan, and Ian Hay. |
| The Saturday Evening Post | US | popular | weekly | 1821 | 1969 | NOT founded in 1728 by Ben Franklin; became popular magazine in 1897, emphasizing business, politics, and romance; fiction by Frank Norris, Jack London, J. Conrad, Kipling, Crane, Dreiser, Wharton, Cather, H. G. Wells, R. Lardner, M. R. Rinehart, G. K. Chesterton, E. P. Oppenheim, B.Tarkington, P. G. Wodehouse, Sinclair Lewis, K. Brush, J. P. Marquand; strong in visual art, with N. Rockwell starting in 1916-this journal is a treasure trove of Americana |
| The Westminster Review | GB | inter | quarterly | 1824 | 1914 | |
| The Athenaeum and Literary Chronicle | GB | inter | quarterly | 1828 | 1921 | |
| The Spectator | GB | inter | weekly | 1828 | 1925 | |
| Chambers (Edinburgh Journal | GB | inter | weekly | 1832 | 1956 | Became a monthly in 1897; aimed at a middlebrow audience, it published early work by A. C. Doyle, M. Pemberton, E. W. Hornung, W. Le Queux, and also work by Mrs. Oliphant, G. Allen, W. Besant, A. Hope, J. Buchan, Sax Rohmer, (and a poem by Raymond Chandler in 1908). One of the longest running periodicals of the time. |
| The Dublin Review | GB | inter | quarterly | 1836 | 1939 | |
| Punch | GB | inter | weekly | 1841 | current | |
| The Illustrated London News | GB | popular | weekly | 1842 | 1971 | Began to publish fiction regularly in the 1880s, publishing work by W. Besant, B. Harte, Hall Caine, Rider Haggard, R. L. Stevenson, T. Hardy, H. James, A. Quiller-Couch, E. Nesbit, J. Conrad, G. k. Chesterton, and others. |
| Harper's Monthly Magazine | US | popular | monthly | 1850 | current | Serials by Dickens, Thackeray, Bulwer, G. Eliot, Trollope, Hawthorne, Twain, Du Maurier stories by Melville, art by W. Homer, essays by Howells, art by N. C. Wyeth; shifted from serials to short fiction in modern period |
| The Country Gentleman | US | popular | weekly | 1853 | 1950s? | Various subtitles, fiction, poetry and articles |
| The London Quarterly Review | GB | inter | quarterly | 1853 | 1968 | other series, varying titles |
| Putnam's Monthly | US | inter | monthly | 1853 | 1910 | Various subtitles; absorbed The Critic in 1906; absorbed by the Atlantic Monthly in 1910 |
| The Saturday Review | GB | inter | weekly | 1855 | 1938 | The voice of upper-class England, it declined into fascist sympathy before its end in 1938; in the 1890s Shaw, Wells, and Beerbohm wrote for it |
| Harper's Weekly | US | popular | weekly | 1857 | 1916 | Serial fiction by Dickens, Collins, cartoons by T. Nast, drawings by Gibson; faded and died in modern period |
| The Atlantic Monthly | US | inter | monthly | 1857 | current | |
| The Bookseller | GB | inter | monthly | 1858 | current | became weekly in 1909 |
| Macmillan's Magazine | GB | inter | monthly | 1859 | 1905 | A major Victorian monthly that set as modernism rose; in ProQuest digital archive |
| Good Words | GB | popular | weekly | 1860 | 1911 | Resolutely middlebrow |
| The Cornhill Magazine | GB | inter | monthly | 1860 | 1975 | A major Victorian periodical until 1882; minor thereafter |
| Fun | GB | inter | weekly | 1861 | 1901 | |
| Temple Bar | GB | inter | monthly | 1861 | 1906 | A Victorian journal that published serious fiction but could not adjust to modernism; In ProQuest digital archive |
| The Month | GB | inter | monthly | 1864 | current | A Catholic journal that has changed names a number of times; mainly essays; some poetry and fiction |
| The Fortnightly (Review) | GB | inter | monthly (semi-monthly for first year only) | 1865 | 1954 | Founded in 1865 by Anthony Trollope and associates, including Walter Bagehot, George Eliot, Frederic Harrison, T.H. Huxley, and G.H. Lewes; under editor W.L. Courtney (1894-1928), published Pound, Joyce, Eliot |
| The Argosy | GB | popular | monthly | 1865 | 1901 | Greatest success was under editorship of Mrs. Henry Wood, 1867-1886, publishing many of her novels. Declined after her death. |
| The Nation | US | inter | weekly | 1865 | current | Noted for criticism, not literature |
| The Contemporary Review | GB | inter | monthly | 1866 | current | Incorporated Fortnightly Review in 1955---In ProQuest digital archive |
| Belgravia | GB | inter | monthly | 1866 | 1899 | A middlebrow illustrated literary journal; declined in the 1890s |
| Cassell's Magazine | GB | popular | monthly | 1867 | 1932 | Some shifts in title. During this period writers published include A. C. Doyle, Rider Haggard, Kipling (Kim), Conrad, Wells, Chesterton, Bennett. |
| Harper's Bazar | US | popular | weekly | 1867 | Current? | Changed spelling to Bazaar in 1929; purchased by Hearst in 1913; a "women's" magazine; published fiction regularly |
| Lippincott's Magzine | US | popular | monthly | 1868 | 1916 | Fiction by Henry James, Ouida; J. B. Esenwein became editor in 1905, published detective and other fiction, travel, poetry |
| Vanity Fair | GB | inter | weekly | 1868 | 1928 | |
| The Graphic | GB | popular | weekly | 1869 | 1932 | Published a mixture of news and fiction, including work by T. Hardy, Rider Haggard, H. G. Wells, J. Buchan, E. Wallace, Lord Dunsany, and V. Sackville-West. |
| The Academy | GB | inter | weekly | 1869 | 1916 | monthly before 1871----In ProQuest digital archive |
| The Literary World | US | inter | various | 1870 | 1904 | Absorbed by The Critic, which was then absorbed by Putnam's; published literary criticism |
| The Publisher's Weekly | US | inter | weekly | 1872 | Current | Important for listings and advertising. |
| The Delineator | US | popular | monthly | 1873 | 1937 | Originally a fashion magazine, it became more literary in the 20th cent.; T. Dreiser became editor 1907 to 1910; writers incl. Kipling, A. C. Doyle, M. R. Rinehart, Zona Gale, Arnold Bennett, Edith Wharton; art by N. C. Wyeth, Rockwell Kent |
| St. Nicholas | US | popular | monthly | 1873 | 1941 | Primarily for young people, its authors included Twain, T. Roosevelt, Henty, Kipling, E St. V. Millay, W. Faulkner. |
| The American Magazine | US | popular | monthly | 1876 | 1956 | Various titles before 1906, when muckraking journalists Ray Stannard Baker, Lincoln Steffens, and Ida M. Tarbell left McClure's Magazine for this one; writers included Jane Addams, "S. S. Van Dine," C. B. Kelland, C. Coolidge. |
| Puck | US | inter | weekly | 1877 | 1918 | A humor magazine, at its best in the eighties and nineties; cartoons were a strength |
| Truth | GB | inter | weekly | 1877 | 1957 | |
| The Nineteenth Century | GB | inter | monthly | 1877 | 1900 | A serious Victorian periodical, more critical than literary |
| The Cambridge Review | GB | inter | weekly (Oct-June) | 1879 | current | |
| The Boy's Own Paper | GB | popular | monthly | 1879 | 1967 | Began as a weekly, but was well-known through annual bound volumes. Became monthly in 1913. Aimed at a youthful audience, as its title proclaims, it published T. B. Reed's school stories, early work by A. C. Doyle and L. Charteris, and many other popular writers. |
| The Dial | US Chicago, then NY | little | various | 1880 | 1929 | Various subtitles; many major writers, including poets Yeats, E. A. Robinson, Amy Lowell, E. St. V. Millay, Eliot, Pound, Cummings, prose by J. Dewey, G. Stein, T. Mann, D. H. Lawrence, Spengler, Bunin |
| The Review of Reviews | GB | inter | monthly | 1880 | 1936 | Somewhat different versions of this journal were published in the UK and the US; hence, entries for both in this list |
| Magnolia Leaves | Magnolia, MA. | bibelot | 1881 | 1882 | ||
| The Century Illustrated Monthly Magazine | US | popular | monthly | 1881 | 1930 | originally Scribner's Monthly 1870-1881; writers incl. Henry James, Bret Harte, Howells, May Sinclair, Twain; poets incl. Amy Lowell, Frost, Santayana, art by M. Parrish, N. C. Wyeth |
| The Critic | US | inter | various | 1881 | 1906 | Interesting mainly for reviews; absorbed by Putnam's in 1906 |
| Longman's Magazine | GB | inter | monthly | 1882 | 1905 | An interesting mixture of high and middle-brow fiction and essays; A. Lang was influential editor |
| The Argosy | US | popular | various (monthly 1894-1917) | 1882 | 199? | Noted for hard boiled fiction. Changed names frequently but kept Argosy in the title. |
| The English Illustrated Magazine | GB | popular | monthly | 1883 | 1913 | Ran in two series, with the new one starting in 1903. An artistic miscellany. Writers included Stevenson, Barrie, Wilde, Shaw, Hardy, James, Morris, Lucy Clifford, and Stephen Crane. |
| Life | US | popular | weekly to 1931, monthly thereafter | 1883 | 1936 | Began as a picture weekly with comic interests; Gibson's first drawing in 1887, becoming owner in 1920; writing by F. P. Adams, D. Parker, W. Rogers, R. Lardner, W. Winchell; name sold in 1936, when new version began |
| The Ladies Home Journal | US | popular | monthly | 1883 | current | Got serious about fiction in the 90s; authors incl. Kipling, Twain, Harte, Crawford, Doyle, Garland, Harris, Jewett, Wiggin; art by Pyle, Gibson; essays by Addams, Keller, T. Roosevelt, W. L. Phelps; continued strong in fiction and essays in later decades. |
| The National Review | GB | inter | monthly | 1883 | 1960 | Literary interest declines in modern period; absorbed English Review in 1937 |
| The Hobby Horse | GB | little | annual/ quarterly | 1884 | 1894 | Organ of the Century Guild |
| Good Housekeeping | US | popular | monthly | 1885 | current | For its first years a bi-weekly, it became monthly in 1891. Starting as devoted to "the higher life of the household" it published more fiction and some poetry from 1904 on. Writers included T. N. Page, R. Le Gallienne, M Deland, M. H. Vorse, Selma Lagerlof, J. Galsworthy, M. R. Rinehart, K. Norris, G. Stratton-Porter, E. Glasgow, and I. S. Cobb. There was also a British version, started in 1922. |
| The Forum | US | inter | monthly | 1886 | 1930 | Continued merged with others until 1950; mainly a critical review until 1905, when fiction and poetry began to appear; authors incl. Galsworthy, Wells, Hergesheimer, Millay, Lindsay, Mencken, Anderson, Bynner, Russell, Dreiser, Babbitt, Dewey |
| Cosmopolitan Magazine | US | popular | monthly | 1886 | current | Began to flourish in the nineties; art by Gibson, Remington, Pyle, Cox; in 2oth cent., prose by Crane, Schreiner; fiction by Wells, Kipling, Stevenson, Twain, London; bought by Hearst in 1905; combined with Hearst's International 1925-52; published Wodehouse, Shaw, Doyle, Galsworthy, Corelli, Glyn, Beach, Oppenheim; in 30s West, Buck, Hurst, Ferber, Lewis, Christie, Queen, Forester; essays by Shaw, Einstein, Tarbell, FDR,; in 50s fiction by Hemingway, Paul, Hersey, Marquand |
| Atalanta | GB | popular | monthly | 1887 | 1898 | Authors include R. L. Stevenson, Rider Haggard, E. Nesbit, F. H. Burnett. |
| Scribner's Magazine | US | inter | monthly | 1887 | 1939 | writing by Kipling, Galsworthy, R. L. Stevenson, E. A. Robinson, A. Lowell, E. Wharton, S. Teasdale, F. S. Fitzgerald, A. C. Doyle, E. W. Hornung, T. Roosevelt, F. Nansen; microfilm, many bound copies around |
| The National Geographic | US | popular | monthly | 1888 | present | Started as a scholarly journal, itbecame one of the most widely circulated magazines in the world. Its visual material is especially important, as is its role as an interpreter of other cultures for its audience. |
| Current Literature/Current Opinion | US | inter | monthly | 1888 | 1925 | Changed names in 1913; merged into Literary Digest 1925; mainly reprints and criticism |
| The Scots Observer | GB | inter | weekly | 1888 | 1897 | Became National Observer in 1890; edited mainly by W. E. Henley; authors include Kipling Yeats, Swinburne, Stevenson, A. Meynell, K. Graham, Mallarme' |
| Collier's | US | popular | weekly to 1953 | 1888 | 1957 | Art by Maxfield Parrish, Frederick Remington, cartoons, strong in photography; fiction by Kipling, Norris, Wister, Wharton, Tarkington, London, Churchill, Wodehouse, Cather, Gale, Rinehart, Marquand; W. Churchill essays in the thirties. An important magazine. |
| The Granta | GB | little | weekly Oct to June | 1889 | 1962 | New series in 1980 |
| Munsey's Magazine | US | popular | weekly; monthly after 1891 | 1889 | 1929 | merged with Argosy in '29; authors incl. Hall Caine, H. R. Haggard, E. W. Wilcox, T. Roosevelt, W. D. Howells, A. C. Doyle, B. Harte,, M. R. Rinehart |
| The Arena | US | inter | monthly | 1889 | 1909 | More political and social than literary, but published some fiction and poetry, plus literary and dramatic criticism. |
| The Library | GB | professional | monthly/ quarterly | 1889 | current | many series name changes |
| The New Review | GB | inter | monthly | 1889 | 1897 | Absorbed by The Outlook in 1898; edited by W. E. Henley; published Yeats, Kipling, Wells, Conrad; an important journal of the transitional period |
| The Literary Digest | US | popular | weekly | 1890 | 1938 | Merged with Time in 1938; condensations of articles from other mags, some reviews, clippings from newspapers; political more than literary |
| Everbody's Magazine | US | popular | monthly | 1890 | 1929 | dropped "Magazine" 1923 |
| The No Name Magazine | Baltimore, MD | bibelot | 1890 | 1892 | ||
| The Author | GB | inter | monthly | 1890 | current | became quarterly in 1919 |
| The Ludgate Monthly | GB | popular | monthly | 1891 | 1901 | Published the first story about a female private detective, by Catherine L. Pirkis in 1893, but thisis a minor periodical. Merged with The Univeersal Magazine in 1901. |
| Black and White | GB | popular | weekly | 1891 | 1912 | Richly illustrated by W. Crane, M. Greiffenhagen and others; printed writing by J. M. Barrie, H. James, A. Quiller-Couch, H. G. Wells, J. K. Jerome, W. Le Queux, A. E. W. Mason, E. Nesbit, and Bram Stoker. |
| The Bookman | GB | inter | monthly | 1891 | 1935 | merged with London Mercury, 1935 |
| The Review of Reviews | US | inter | monthly | 1891 | 1937 | The US version became more distinct in 1897; both reviewed other journals and published condensed version of fiction by Tolstoy and others; merged with the Literary Digest in 1937 |
| Reedy's Mirror | US | little | weekly | 1891 | 1920 | Based in St. Louis, MO, this was an early and important little magazine, especially under the editorship of William Marion Reedy from 1913 to 1920, when it was an important rival to Poetry magazineof Chicago. Aka The Mirror, The Sunday Mirror |
| Poet Lore | US | inter | monthly? | 1891 | 1939 | |
| The Strand Magazine | GB | popular | monthly | 1891 | 1950 | Provided the template for the illustrated popular magazine (Ashley); began with translations of Pushkin, Maupassant and others; introduced the short-story series with Doyle's Sherlock Holmes, continuing later with Wodehouse's Jeeves and others. Writers included W. Le Queux, E. Phillpotts, H. G. Wells, E. Nesbit, W. W. Jacobs, A. E. W. Mason, A. Bennett, H. Caine, Sapper, E. Dell, D. H. Lawrence, A. Huxley, D. Sayers, and A. Christie. |
| Courrier Innocent | Scituate, Mass & Giverny, France | bibelot | 1891 | 1897 | ||
| Sewanee Review | US | little | quarterly | 1892 | current | Primarily a journal of literary criticism with a distinguished list of poets and academic critics writing for it. |
| Penny Fiction | NY | bibelot | 1892 | 1898 | ||
| The Idler | GB | little | monthly | 1892 | 1911 | Founded by Jerome K. Jerome; a middlebrow literary journal. Authors included Kipling, Wells, Hope, Gissing, Weyman, and Le Queux. |
| Two Tales | Boston | bibelot | weekly | 1892 | 1893 | |
| The Mahogany Tree | Boston | bibelot | weekly | 1892 | 1892 | Illustrated. |
| Vogue | US | popular | weekly to 1910 | 1892 | current | A fashion and society journal with very occasional forays into literature, publishing writers like Kate Chopin |
| The Studio | UK | little | monthly | 1893 | 1964 | Vols. 1-116 have subtitle: An illustrated magazine of fine and applied art (varies slightly)./ From Mar. 1897 to 1921 an American edition of the Studio was issued in New York, entitled: The International Studio. A certain part of each number was printed in England and joined with an American section to make the complete magazine. In 1922 the International studio was purchased by the International studio inc., and was then produced wholly in America. |
| The Nickell Magazine | Boston | bibelot | 1893 | 1903 | Absorbed The Whole Family. | |
| The Woman at Home | GB | mixed | monthly | 1893 | 1931 | Some title changes over the life of the magazine; began as a "female Strand (Ashley), aimed at middle-class women; mixed society reporting with literary material, including interviews, profiles, and portraits; writers included G. Atherton, M. Sinclair, E. Nesbit, W. Le Queux, E. P. Oppenheim, Baroness Orczy, E. F. Benson, and R. West. |
| Pall Mall Magazine | GB | mixed | monthly | 1893 | 1914 | Absorbed by Nash's, 1914, it mixed fiction and reporting on social and political matters. Writers ncluded P. Verlaine, A. Quiller-Couch, W. E. Henley, G. K. Chesterton, B. Stoker, G. Meredith, Rider Haggard, W. De la Mare, R. L. Stevenson, A. W. Pinero, G. Moore, H. G. Wells, J. Conrad, R. Sabatini, E. M. Forster, H. Belloc, And G. K. Chesterton; visual artists included E. Dulac, A. Rackham |
| The Knight-Errant | Boston | bibelot | quarterly | 1893 | 1893> | |
| The Butterfly | London | bibelot | 1893 | 1894 | ||
| The Little Monthly | New York | bibelot | 1893 | 1894 | ||
| Modern Art | Indianapolis and Boston | bibelot | 1893 | 1897 | ||
| McClure's Magazine | US | popular | monthly | 1893 | 1929 | One of the cheap popular magazines that also published work of literary quality and important muckraking journalism; authors included Kipling, Jack London, A. C. Doyle, S. Crane, W. Cather, W. B. Yeats; declined after 1919; microfilm only |
| The Chap-Book | Chicago (Cambridge) | bibelot | semi-monthly | 1894 | 1898 | |
| Wave | bibelot | 1894 | 1895 | |||
| Little Journeys | East Aurora, NY | bibelot | 1894 | 1903 | ||
| The Rolling Stone | US | little | weekly | 1894 | 1895 | Short lived; owned and mostly written by W. S. Porter who later became better known as O. Henry |
| The Yellow Book | GB | inter | quarterly | 1894 | 1897 | Justly famous and much reprinted |
| The Quest | Boston and Birmingham, England | bibelot | 1894 | 1896 | Illustrated. | |
| Footlights | Philadelphia | bibelot | 1894 | 1896 | ||
| Fly Leaf | Boston | bibelot | 1895 | 1896 | ||
| Uriel | Boston | bibelot | 1895 | 1895 | ||
| M'lle New York | US | little | bi-weekly | 1895 | 1899 | suspended 1907; edited by Vance Thompson and James Hunecker; published mainly commentary on literature, music, and the arts |
| The Black Book | New York | bibelot | once | 1895 | 1895 | |
| The Lark | San Francisco | bibelot | monthly | 1895 | 1896 | Illustrated. |
| The Philistine | US | inter | monthly | 1895 | 1915 | A journal of literary criticism and satire |
| The Pocket Magazine | New York | bibelot | 1895 | 1901 | ||
| The Pilgrim | Milwaukee | bibelot | 1895 | 1896 | ||
| Truth in Boston | Boston | bibelot | 1895 | 1896 | ||
| Echo | Chicago | bibelot | 1895 | 1897 | ||
| The Lotus | Kansas City | bibelot | monthly | 1895 | 1897 | Illustrated. |
| The New Bohemian | Cincinnati | bibelot | 1895 | 1896 | ||
| The Bauble | Washington, D.C. | bibelot | 1895 | 1896 | ||
| Easy Chair | Macon, Ga. | bibelot | 1895 | 1895 | ||
| The Black Cat | US | inter | monthly | 1895 | 1923 | Published fiction, including Jack London; died in 1920; revived in 1922 as semimonthly |
| Windsor Magazine | GB | popular | monthly | 1895 | 1939 | Running right through the rise of modernism, this magazine was everything modernism was not, as the following list of contributors indicates: Marie Corelli, Grant Allen, Hall Caine, Rider Haggard, Bret Harte, Rudyard Kipling, W. D. Howells, and Jack London. It also welcomed Dornford Yates and P. G. Wodehouse's early works; bound copies around; no Rep. |
| Hour Book | Cumberland, MD. | bibelot | monthly | 1895 | 1895 | Illustrated. |
| The Horn Book | New York | bibelot | 1895 | 1895 | ||
| Autocrat | Chicago | bibelot | monthly | 1895 | 1895 | |
| Romance | NY | bibelot | 1895 | 1896 | ||
| Opera Glass | Boston | bibelot | 1895 | 1897 | ||
| Our Country | New York | bibelot | 1895 | 1897 | ||
| The Baton | Kansas City | bibelot | monthly | 1895 | 1897 | |
| Chapman's Magazine | GB | popular | monthly | 1895 | 1902 | A fiction magazine. Retitled Cramp[ton's Magazine in in 1898. Writers included Violet Hunt, Arthur Machen, Stephen Crane, Edith Nesbit. |
| The Bauble | Washington, DC | bibelot | monthly | 1895 | 1897 | |
| The Black Book | New York | bibelot | once | 1895 | 1895 | |
| Clips | NY | bibelot | 1895 | 1897 | ||
| The Blue Book | Cincinnati | bibelot | weekly | 1895 | 1895 | |
| The Bibelot | Portland, ME | little | monthly | 1895 | 1914 | Mainly a reprinter of literary works, including Celtic revival, symbolist, etc. Small size, cheap, well-printed |
| The Bookman | US | inter | monthly | 1895 | 1933 | First to list best sellers. |
| Chips | NY | bibelot | 1895 | 1896 | ||
| The Fad | San Antonio, TX | bibelot | 1896 | 1897 | ||
| The Owl | Boston/NY | bibelot | monthly | 1896 | 1900 | |
| The Owl | Lowell, Mass | bibelot | 1896 | 1896 | ||
| Papyrus | Newburgh, NY | bibelot | 1896 | 1896 | ||
| Time & the Hour | Boston | bibelot | weekly | 1896 | 1899 | Illustrated. |
| The Clique | Maywood, IL | bibelot | 1896 | 1896 | ||
| Paragraphs | Boston | bibelot | 1896 | 1896 | ||
| Penny Magazine | New York | bibelot | monthly | 1896 | 1901 | Illustrated. |
| Whims | NY | bibelot | monthly | 1896 | 1896 | Illustrated. |
| The Red Letter | Boston | bibelot | monthly | 1896 | 1897 | Illustrated. |
| What to Eat | Minneapolis | bibelot | 1896 | 1903 | ||
| The Wet Dog | Boston | bibelot | 1896 | 1896 | ||
| Roycroft Quarterly | East Aurora, NY | bibelot | 1896 | 1896 | ||
| The Waste-basket | Detroit, MI. | bibelot | 1896 | 1896 | ||
| The Shadow | Cambridge, MA | bibelot | 1896 | 1896 | ||
| The Skeptic | Boston | bibelot | 1896 | 1897 | ||
| Sothoron's Magazine | Philadelphia | bibelot | monthly | 1896 | 1897 | Illustrated. |
| The Symposium | Northampton, Mass | bibelot | 1896 | 1896 | ||
| The White Elephant | New York | bibelot | 1896 | 1897 | Absorbed Poker Chips. | |
| Quartier Latin | Paris, London, New York | bibelot | monthly | 1896 | 1899 | Illustrated. |
| The Dwarf Magazine | NY | bibelot | 1896 | 1896 | ||
| Penny Magazine | Philadelphia | bibelot | 1896 | 1896> | ||
| The Literary Guide and Rationalist Review | GB | little | monthly | 1896 | 1941 | part of longer series |
| The Evergreen | *Edinburgh | bibelot | quarterly | 1896 | 1896 | |
| Pierrot | Kansas City | bibelot | monthly | 1896 | 1896 | Illustrated. |
| Poker Chips (absorbed by White Elephant) | New York | bibelot | 1896 | 1896 | ||
| Poster Lore | Kansas City, MO | bibelot | 1896 | 1896 | ||
| The Poster | New York | bibelot | 1896 | 1896 | ||
| Pot-Pourri | Boston | bibelot | fortnightly | 1896 | 1896 | Illustrated. |
| The Daily Tatler | New York | bibelot | 1896 | 1896 | ||
| Pearson's Magazine | GB | mixed | monthly | 1896 | 1939 | A middlebrow journal, similar to the Windsor, it published writers like Dornford Yates, R. A. Freeman, Rider Haggard, R. L. Stevenson, A. C. Doyle, P. C. Wren, S. Maugham, and A. Waugh. |
| The Pageant | GB | little | annual | 1896 | 1897 | contribs include Swinburne, W. B. Yeats, Verlaine, Maeterlinck, T. S. Moore, L. Johnson, R. Bridges, M. Beerbohm, E. Dowson; art by Burne-Jones, Whistler, D. G. Rossetti, W. Rothenstein, G. Moreau, L. Pissaro |
| The Lady's Realm | GB | mixed | monthly | 1896 | 1916 | Aimed at a social, but not an intellectual, elite, this magazine publied writers like E. F. Benson, Rider Haggard, Walter De la Mare, and had articles about such writers as Frances hodgson Burnett, and Marie Corelli. |
| Kit-Kat | Philadelphia | bibelot | weekly | 1896 | 1897 | Illustrated. |
| Harlequin | Lockport, NY | bibelot | 1896 | 1896 | ||
| The Magpie | Charlottesville, VA. | bibelot | monthly | 1896 | 1896 | Illustrated. |
| Cambridge Magazine | Cambridge, MA | bibelot | monthly | 1896 | 1896 | |
| Le Petit Journal des Réfusées | San Francisco | bibelot | 1896 | 1896 | ||
| Hatchet | Leavenworth, KA. | bibelot | irregular | 1896 | 1897 | Illustrated. |
| Cosmopolis | GB/France | inter | monthly | 1896 | 1898 | Published in English, French, and German, with a distinguished list of contributors; Kraus reprint |
| The Little Smoker | Chicago | bibelot | 1896 | 1896 | ||
| Little Chap | Manlius, NY | bibelot | 1896 | 1896 | ||
| The Savoy | GB | little | quarterly, monthly | 1896 | 1896 | Short-lived but interesting; fiction by Symons, Conrad, Yeats; prose by Pater, H. Ellis, Shaw, Beerbohm; art mostly by Beardsley |
| Bradley, His Book | Springfield, Mass | bibelot | 1896 | 1897 | ||
| Alkahest | Atlanta, Ga. | bibelot | monthly | 1896 | 1903 | |
| The Great Round World | New York | bibelot | weekly | 1896 | 1903 | Illustrated. |
| The Clack Book | Lansing, Mich. | bibelot | monthly | 1896 | 1897 | |
| The Chop-book | New York | bibelot | 1896 | 1896 | ||
| John-a-Dreams | New York | bibelot | 1896 | 1897 | ||
| Miss Blue Stocking | Boston | bibelot | monthly and semi-monthly | 1896 | 1896 | Illustrated. |
| Chapters | Manlius, NY | bibelot | monthly | 1896 | 1897 | |
| The White Rabbit | Oberlin, Ohio | bibelot | monthly | 1897 | 1897 | Illustrated. |
| The Washingtonian | Washington D.C. | bibelot | 1897 | 1897 | ||
| Events | Wheeling, W. VA | bibelot | 1897 | 1898 | ||
| The Ishmaelite | Indianapolis | bibelot | monthly | 1897 | 1899 | Illustrated. |
| The Bohemian | Philadelphia | bibelot | monthly | 1897 | 1898 | |
| The Yellow Kid | New York | bibelot | 1897 | 1897 | Absorbed by Yellow Book. | |
| Why? | Cedar Rapids, Iowa | bibelot | 1897 | 1897 | ||
| Literature | GB | inter | weekly | 1897 | 1902 | merged with Academy in 1902 |
| Klondike Grubstakes | Seattle, WA | bibelot | monthly | 1897 | 1898 | |
| McCall's Magazine | US | popular | monthly | 1897 | 2001 | Absorbed The Queen of Fashion in 1897; remained a women's magazine; fiction writers include D. Canfield, K. Norris, B. Tarkington, M. R. Rinehart, Z. Grey, H. Broun, F. S. fitzgerald, J. P. Marquand |
| The Dome | GB | little | quarterly | 1897 | 1900 | Contributors include Symons, Binyon, C. J. Holmes, L. Housman, R. Fry, Yeats; music by Elgar, Delius |
| Phyllida, or the Milkmaid | San Francisco | bibelot | 1897 | 1897 | ||
| The Criterion | New York | bibelot | 1897 | 1897 | ||
| Morningside | NY (Columbia Univ.) | bibelot | 1897 | 1928 | ||
| The Grasshopper | Newport, RI | bibelot | semi-monthly | 1897 | 1898 | Illustrated. |
| The Gray Goose | Cincinnati | bibelot | 1897 | 1903 | ||
| The Tattler Magazine | Boston | bibelot | 1897 | 1898 | ||
| Four o'clock | Chicago | bibelot | monthly | 1897 | 1902 | Illustrated. |
| The Yellow Book | New York | bibelot | 1897 | 1898 | Absorbed Yellow Kid. | |
| Buzz Saw | New York | bibelot | 1897 | 1897 | ||
| Philosopher | Wasau, Wisc. | bibelot | monthly | 1897 | 1906 | Illustrated. |
| The Anti-Philistine | London, England | bibelot | monthly | 1897 | 1897 | |
| The Literary Review | Boston | bibelot | 1897 | 1900 | ||
| Woman's Home Companion | US | popular | monthly | 1897 (1874) | 1957 | Assumed present title in 1897, after which authors include H. Garland, S. O. Jewett, B. Harte, R Sabatini, J. London, K. Norris, W. Cather, S. Anderson, B. Tarkington, E. Glasgow, S. Lewis, P. Buck, J. Galsworthy, A. Bennett |
| Two Penny Classics | Chicago | bibelot | 1898 | 1898 | ||
| The Honey Jar | Columbus, OH | bibelot | 1898 | 1906 | ||
| Quill | San Francisco | bibelot | 1898 | 1898 | ||
| The Windmill | *London | bibelot | quarterly | 1898 | 1899 | |
| Varieties | NY | bibelot | 1898 | 1898 | ||
| Quivera Legends | Roca, Nebraska | bibelot | 1898 | 1900 | ||
| The Baton Quarterly | Kansas City | bibelot | quarterly | 1898 | 1898 | |
| Ebell | Los Angeles | bibelot | monthly | 1898 | 1899 | |
| American Book-Lore | Milwaukee | bibelot | quarterly | 1898 | 1899 | |
| Twilight | San Francisco | bibelot | 1898 | 1898 | ||
| Enfant Terrible! | NY | bibelot | 1898 | 1898 | ||
| In Lantern Land | Hartford, CT. | bibelot | monthly | 1898 | 1899 | |
| Lucifer' Lantern | Salt Lake City, UT | bibelot | 1898 | 1901 | ||
| Modern Ideas | Joliet, IL | bibelot | 1898 | 1898 | ||
| McC's Illustrated | Detroit, Mich. | bibelot | monthly | 1898 | 1898 | Illustrated. |
| Forms and Fantasies | Chicago | bibelot | monthly | 1898 | 1899 | |
| The Page | *Hackbridge, Surrey, England | bibelot | monthly | 1898 | 1901 | |
| Four o'clock | NY | bibelot | 1898 | 1898 | ||
| Pickwick | Chicago | bibelot | monthly | 1898 | 1898 | Illustrated. |
| Gems of American Patriotism | Washington, D.C. | bibelot | quarterly | 1898 | 1898 | |
| The London Magazne | GB | popular | monthly | 1898 | 1933 | Beginning with Harmsworth in the title and going through a number of variants, this was the largest-selling magazine of the Edwardian era. Authors included Wells, Hardy, and Edith Nesbit, whose Railway Children ran as a serial in 1905-06. Later, Quiller-Couch, Conrad, Sabatini, Bennett, Wodehouse, Jack London, Milne, Wren, and "Sapper." contributed. |
| LanternLand | Hartford, CT. | bibelot | 1898 | 1899 | ||
| Drift (absorbed by Pacific Monthly) | Portland, OR | bibelot | monthly | 1898 | 1911 | |
| The Kiote | Lincoln, Nebraska | bibelot | monthly | 1898 | 1901 | Illustrated. |
| The Royal Magazine | GB | popular | monthly | 1898 | 1939 | After some title changes became a screen magazine in 1935, though it had emphasized photography from the beginning. Writers included Orczy, Sabatini, Rohmer (under his real name of Ward), E. Glyn, M. Arlen, J. Hergesheimer, M. Edginton, and A. Achmed, but reporting and history were mixxed with fiction in this magazine. |
| Pot-Pourri | Fremont, OH | bibelot | 1898 | 1899 | ||
| The Butterfly | London | bibelot | monthly | 1899 | 1900 | |
| Fisic for Folks | Leominster, Mass | bibelot | monthly | 1899 | 1899 | |
| The Future | Taunton, MA. | bibelot | monthly | 1899 | 1900 | |
| The Higher Law | Boston | bibelot | 1899 | 1902 | ||
| A Kipling Note Book | New York | bibelot | 1899 | 1900 | ||
| Beltaine | GB | little | irregular | 1899 | 1900 | three issues published; Irish Literary Theatre, Yeats involved---Cass reprint |
| East & West | NY | bibelot | 1899 | 1900 | ||
| The Onlooker | NY | bibelot | weekly | 1899 | 1902 | Illustrated. |
| The Captain | GB | popular | monthly | 1899 | 1924 | A youth-oriented version of The Strand; published early work by P. G. Wodehouse. |
| The Anglo-Saxon Review | GB | little | quarterly | 1899 | 1901 | Founded by Lady Churchill (Winston's mother). Contributors include Shaw, Beerbohm, Swinburne, and Henry James |
| The Elf | *London | bibelot | 1899 | 1900 | ||
| The Impressionist | NY | bibelot | 1899 | 1900 | ||
| Book Culture | Boston | bibelot | monthly | 1899 | 1899 | |
| The Blue Sky | Chicago | bibelot | monthly and bimonthly | 1899 | 1902 | |
| The Dilettante | Seattle | bibelot | monthly | 1899 | 1901 | |
| Home Craft | Chicago | bibelot | 1899 | 1900 | ||
| Bruno's Review of Life | NY | bibelot | 1900 | 1922 | ||
| The World's Work | US | inter | monthly | 1900 | 1932 | This was a major voice of American capitalism until it merged with Review of Reviews in 1932; social and political rather than literary, it published important prose by B. T. Washington, W. E. B. Du Bois; some discussion of literature and visual art; and chapters on Arabia by T. E. Lawrence in 1921. Its editor until 1913 was Arthur Page, of the Doubleday and Page publishing firm, which published the magazine. Page championed "Talylorism" in industry was very critical of public services, including the army and the postal service. |
| The Colored American Magazine | US | little | monthly | 1900 | 1909 | Called itself , with considerable justification, "the only high-class illustrated monthly in the world devoted exclusively to the interests of the Negro Race." Published first in Boston, then in New York. |
| The Cornhill Booklet | Boston | bibelot | monthly | 1900 | 1914 | |
| The Vandal | Pittsburg | bibelot | 1900 | 1900 | ||
| Cranbrook Papers | Detroit | bibelot | 1900 | 1901 | ||
| The Monthly Review | GB | inter | monthly | 1900 | 1907 | An interesting failure; published R. Fry, W. B. Yeats; reviewed literature and art; microform |
| The Bachelor Book | Chicago and Wausau, WI | bibelot | monthly | 1900 | 1900 | |
| Bohemian | Boston | bibelot | monthly | 1900 | 1909 | |
| 10 Story Book | Chicago | mixed | 1900 | 1903 | Started as a bibelot, finished as a pulp. Published popular fiction. | |
| The Kansas Knocker | Topeka, KA | bibelot | quarterly | 1900 | 1901 | |
| The Rebel | Lincoln, Nebraska | bibelot | 1900 | 1901 | ||
| The Muse | Oakland, CA | bibelot | quarterly | 1900 | 1901 | Illustrated. |
| Realization | Washington, D.C. | bibelot | 1900 | 1903 | ||
| Kit-Kats | Pittsburg, PA | bibelot | monthly | 1900 | 1901 | |
| The Goose Quill | Chicago | bibelot | 1900 | 1904 | Illustrated. | |
| Kleon | Scranton, PA | bibelot | monthly | 1900 | 1901 | Illustrated. |
| The Quiet Observer | Pittsburg | bibelot | weekly | 1900 | 1901 | Illustrated. |
| The Leaven | Northfield, MN | bibelot | 1900 | 1901 | ||
| The Lion's Mouth | Cincinnati | bibelot | monthly | 1900 | 1901 | Illustrated. |
| The Literary Dot | NY | bibelot | monthly | 1900 | 1900 | Illustrated. |
| The Erudite | Worcester, MA. | bibelot | 1900 | 1903 | ||
| The Lucky Dog | Springfield, OH | bibelot | 1900 | 1903 | ||
| Phonogram | New York | bibelot | 1900 | 1902 | ||
| Personal Impressions | San Francisco | bibelot | monthly | 1900 | 1900 | Illustrated. |
| The Pebble | Omaha, Nebraska | bibelot | monthly | 1900 | 1901 | Illustrated. |
| Machere | Keene, NH | bibelot | 1900 | 1900 | ||
| Magazine of Poetry | NY | bibelot | monthly | 1900 | 1900 | Illustrated. |
| The Optimist | Boone, Iowa | bibelot | 1900 | 1901 | ||
| Noon | Evanston, IL | bibelot | monthly | 1900 | 1902 | Illustrated. |
| Les Jeunes | New York | bibelot | 1900 | 1900 | ||
| The Schoolmaster | Cornwall-on-Hudson, NY | bibelot | 1900 | 1902 | ||
| Hoppergrass | Ashland, VA | bibelot | monthly | 1900 | 1902 | Illustrated. |
| The Stilletto | NewYork | bibelot | 1900 | 1900 | ||
| Stevensonia | NY | bibelot | 1900 | 1900 | ||
| Good Cheer | Boston | bibelot | monthly | 1900 | 1901 | |
| A Stuffed Club for Everybody | Denver | bibelot | 1900 | 1903 | ||
| The Scroll | *Montreal, Canada | bibelot | 1900 | 1901 | ||
| The Story-teller | Terre Haute, IN | bibelot | 1900 | 1900 | ||
| Impressions | San Francisco | bibelot | monthly | 1900 | 1903 | Illustrated. |
| In Many Keys | Muskegon, Mich. | bibelot | 1900 | 1902 | ||
| The Rough Rider | Butte, Montana | bibelot | 1900 | 1901 | ||
| The Smart Set | US | popular | monthly | 1900 | 1930 | Contributors include Jack London, A. Bierce, R. Herrick, J. B. Cabell, T. Dreiser, O. Henry, A. Symons, Huneker, D. H. Lawrence, G. Moore, F. Harris, W. B. Yeats, A. Schnitzler, F. Wedekind, A. Strindberg, and W. B. Yeats, along with Mencken and Nathan.; various subtitles, many editors--the most famous editors being G. J. Nathan and H. L. Mencken, who ran the magazine from 1914 to1923. W. H. Wright (later known as S. S. Van Dine) edited in 1913-14.; microfilm |
| The Sphere | GB | popular | weekly | 1900 | 1964 | An illustrated weekly, it published writing by H. Caine, R. W. Chambers, M. Corelli, T. Hardy, A. E. W. Mason, K. Mansfield, E. Nesbit and others. |
| Samhain | GB/Ire | little | irregular | 1901 | 1908 | suspended 06-08; Cass reprint |
| Monologue | Los Angeles | bibelot | 1901 | 1901 | ||
| Hart's Yarns | New York | bibelot | 1901 | 1902 | ||
| Chat | New York | bibelot | monthly | 1901 | 1903 | |
| Homo | Beverly, NJ | bibelot | 1901 | 1902 | ||
| The Manuscript | New York | bibelot | 1901 | 1901 | ||
| Angel's Food | LA | bibelot | weekly and bi-weekly | 1901 | 1901 | |
| Many Keys | Muskegon, Mich. | bibelot | 1901 | 1901 | ||
| The Jester | Chicago | bibelot | 1901 | 1901 | ||
| A Little Spasm | ?At the home of Mozart | bibelot | 1901 | 1901 | ||
| The Idol | San Francisco | bibelot | 1901 | 1901 | ||
| The Comrade | US | little | monthly | 1901 | 1905 | First socialist magazine in U.S.; Contributors: Tolstoy, Gorky, Turgenieff; J. London, C. P. Gilman. U. Sinclair, E. Markham; E. Debs W. Crane; R. Walker, D. Beard |
| The Book Booster | Evanston, IL | bibelot | once | 1901 | 1901 | |
| The Ghourlie | Morgantown, W. Virg. | bibelot | 1901 | 1903 | ||
| The Knocker | Philadelphia | bibelot | monthly | 1901 | 1901 | |
| Jabs | Chicago | bibelot | 1901 | 1903 | ||
| The Biloustine | Evanston, IL | bibelot | twice | 1901 | 1901 | |
| The Junk | New York | bibelot | 1901 | 1902 | ||
| The Kit-Bag | *Fredericton, N.B. (Canada) | bibelot | 1901 | 1903 | ||
| Snap Shots | New York | bibelot | 1901 | 1901 | ||
| The Princess | Chicago | bibelot | monthly | 1901 | 1902 | Illustrated. |
| The Rebel | Philadelphia | bibelot | 1901 | 1901 | ||
| The Whisper | East Aurora, NY | bibelot | 1901 | 1902 | ||
| The White Owl | Philadelphia | bibelot | monthly | 1901 | 1902 | Illustrated. |
| Ye Quaint Magazine | Boston | bibelot | 1901 | 1903 | ||
| The Yellow Dog | Chicago | bibelot | monthly | 1901 | 1901 | Illustrated. |
| Seen and Heard by Megarge | Philadelphia | bibelot | weekly | 1901 | 1903 | |
| The Dwarf | Morton Park, IL | bibelot | monthly | 1901 | 1901 | |
| The Sage Leaf | Boston | bibelot | 1901 | 1901> | ||
| The Rubric | Chicago | bibelot | bi-monthly | 1901 | 1902 | Illustrated. |
| The Powder Magazine | Detroit, MI. | bibelot | 1901 | 1901 | ||
| Story Book | Chicago | bibelot | monthly | 1901 | 1901 | Illustrated. |
| Commentator | NY | bibelot | 1901 | 1901 | ||
| The Lady's Magazine | GB | popular | monthly | 1901 | 1905 | Some title changes. Fiction and reporting on women's activities. Writers included Hall Caine, Rosalie Neish. Art by Rackham and others. |
| The Thrush | *London | bibelot | 1901 | 1902 | ||
| North Carolina Booklet | Raleigh, NC | bibelot | 1901 | 1926 | ||
| The Occasional One | Dunkirk, NY | bibelot | 1901 | 1903 | ||
| The Nineteenth Century and After | GB | inter | monthly | 1901 | 1951 | was Nineteenth Century until 1901 |
| Wayside Tales | Detroit, MI | bibelot | 1901 | 1903 | ||
| East & West: A Monthly Review | *Bombay | bibelot | 1901 | 1921 | ||
| The Rhymster | Hedrich, Iowa | bibelot | monthly | 1901 | 1901 | Illustrated. |
| What's the Use | East Aurora, NY | bibelot | 1901 | 1903 | ||
| The Whim | Newark, NJ | bibelot | 1901 | 1905 | ||
| The Pearl Magazine | Boston | bibelot | monthly | 1901 | 1901 | Illustrated. |
| The South Atlantic Quarterly | US | inter | quarterly | 1902 | current | |
| The Impressionist | St. Louis | bibelot | 1902 | 1903 | ||
| The New Literary Review | Boston | bibelot | monthly | 1902 | 1902 | Illustrated. |
| Ego | Canondale, PA. | bibelot | 1902 | 1902 | ||
| Atmos | San Francisco | bibelot | monthly | 1902 | 1903 | |
| Tabasco | Lapeer, Mich | bibelot | monthly | 1902 | 1902 | Illustrated. |
| The Hobby | Baltimore, MD. | bibelot | 1902 | 1902 | ||
| The Thistle | New Rochelle, NY | bibelot | 1902 | 1903 | ||
| Handicraft | Boston | bibelot | 1902 | 1903 | ||
| Westminster Chap Book | Franklin, Indiana | bibelot | monthly | 1902 | 1902 | Illustrated. |
| Items | Chicago | bibelot | weekly | 1902 | 1902 | |
| Medical Tractates | Boston | bibelot | 1902 | 1902 | ||
| The Corsair | Boston | bibelot | weekly | 1902 | 1902 | |
| Ye Manual | Providence, RI | bibelot | 1902 | 1903 | ||
| The Freak | Sharon, Mass | bibelot | monthly | 1902 | 1903 | |
| Country Time and Tide | Montague, Mass | bibelot | monthly | 1902 | 1903 | |
| The Essene | Denver | bibelot | 1902 | 1903 | ||
| T. P.'s Weekly | GB | little | weekly | 1902 | 1916 | |
| The New Review | Boston | bibelot | 1902 | 1902 | ||
| The Protest | *Eden Bridge, Kent, England | bibelot | 1902 | 1903 | ||
| The Knocker | Blair, Nebraska | bibelot | monthly | 1902 | 1903 | |
| Wisdom | Boston | bibelot | 1902 | 1902 | ||
| Quips and Snips | Boston | bibelot | 1902 | 1902 | ||
| The Blackboard | St. Paul, MN | bibelot | monthly | 1902 | 1903 | |
| The Venture | GB | little | annual | 1903 | 1905 | Eds. L Housman and W. S. Maugham; Contribs include J. Masefield, Hardy, S Philips, F. Thompson, L. Binyon, Maugham, A. Meynell, V. Hunt, A Symons, T. S. Moore, F. Farr, J. Joyce, O. Gogarty |
| The Green Sheaf | GB | little | monthly (13 numbers) | 1903 | 1904 | |
| The Papyrus | US | little | monthly | 1903 | 1914 | became Phoenix, June '14 |
| Artsman | Philadelphia | bibelot | monthly | 1903 | 1907 | |
| Poet's Own | Louisville, KY | bibelot | 1903 | 1903 | ||
| Valley Magazine | St. Louis, MO, by Reedy | bibelot | 1903 | 1903 | ||
| Camera Work | US | little | quarterly | 1903 | 1917 | Stieglitz, devoted to photography; Kraus reprint '69 |
| The Book of the Month | Yonkers, NY | bibelot | monthly | 1903 | 1903 | |
| Olympian | Nashville | bibelot | 1903 | 1903 | ||
| The New York Inquierer | New York | bibelot | 1903 | 1903 | ||
| The Yahoo | St. Louis, MO | bibelot | 1903 | 1903 | ||
| The Burlington Magazine for Connoisseurs | GB | group | monthly | 1903 | 1947 | In JSTOR |
| Appleton's Booklover's Magazine | US | inter | monthly | 1903 | 1909 | title varied |
| The Gauntlet | Chicago | bibelot | monthly | 1903 | 1903 | |
| Pro Cingula Veritas | Concord, Mass | bibelot | 1903 | 1903 | ||
| Fry's Magazine | GB | popular | monthly | 1904 | 1914 | A sporting magazine that published fiction by Jack London and others. |
| Tales from town topics | NY | bibelot | 1904 | 1904 | ||
| Birds of Passage | Gettysburg, PA | bibelot | monthly | 1904 | 1904 | |
| The Voice of the Negro | US | little | monthly | 1904 | 1907 | Published in Atlanta and then in Chicago; writers included W.E..B. DuBois, George Washington Carver, Mary Church Terrell, John H. Adams Jr. and Booker T. Washington. |
| Birds of Passage | Gettysburg, PA | bibelot | monthly | 1904 | 1904 | |
| Barbarian | Reading, MA | bibelot | once | 1904 | 1904 | |
| The Rose-jar | NY | bibelot | 1904 | 1905 | ||
| Dana | GB/Ire | little | monthly | 1904 | 1905 | Eglinton edited, Moore, Dujardin, and Joyce contributed. MJP edition |
| Land and Sea | New York | bibelot | 1904 | 1904 | ||
| The Novel Magazine | GB | popular | monthly | 1905 | 1937 | Published by Pearson, this was the first British all-fiction magazine. Writers were mainly connected to Pearson's and included Broness Orczy, R. Sabatini, P. G. Wodehouse, Edgar Wallace, and Roy Vickers. |
| The Blue Book | US | popular | monthly | 1905 | 1975 | Writers included Nelson S. Bond, Max Brand, Gelett Burgess, Agatha Christie, Irvin S. Cobb, William Lindsay Gresham, Robert A. Heinlein, MacKinlay Kantor, Willy Ley, Theodore Pratt. Ivan Sanderson, Luke Short,, Booth Tarkington. Albert Payson Terhune, Malcolm Wheeler-Nicholson, and Philip Wylie. Some title changes and gaps in publication. |
| The Grand Magazine | GB | popular | monthly | 1905 | 1940 | One of the first of the "pulps" it included writers like Shaw, Wells, Mrs. Belloc Lowndes, Jack London, And A. C. Doyle. Ran a series on "My Best Story" with introductions by the authors. |
| Alexander's Magazine | US | little | monthly | 1905 | 1909 | An African American education magazine, published in Boston |
| The Jawbone | Whitewood, SD | bibelot | 1905 | 1909 | ||
| Yours Truly | Chicago | bibelot | 1905 | 1907 | ||
| Oyler's Mag. | Minneapolis | bibelot | 1905 | 1905 | ||
| Pageant | Chicago | bibelot | 1905 | 1905 | ||
| To-morrow | Chicago | bibelot | 1905 | 1905 | ||
| Pathfinder | Sewanee, Tennessee | bibelot | 1906 | 1911 | ||
| Philopolis | San Francisco | bibelot | 1906 | 1909 | ||
| Catchwords | Highland Park | bibelot | 1906 | 1906 | ||
| Mother Earth | US | little | monthly | 1906 | 1917 | An anarchist journal, edited by Emma Goldman; contributors include Goldman, plus M. Bodenheim, M. Gorky, C. L. R. James, E. O'Neil, M. Sanger, L. Tolstoy; cover art by Man Ray; Anthology published in 2001 |
| The Arrow | GB/Ire | little | irregular | 1906 | 1909 | Abbey Theatre |
| Rose Bush | Cleveland, Ohio | bibelot | 1906 | 1906> | ||
| The Shanacie | Ireland | little | quarterly | 1906 | 1907 | Contributors include J. M. Synge, W. B. Yeats, J. Eglinton, P Colum, J. B. Yeats, Lord Dundany |
| Steel Points | Portland, OR | bibelot | 1906 | 1907 | ||
| Atom | Brooklyn | bibelot | 1906 | 1906 | ||
| The Butterfly Quarterly | Philadelphia | bibelot | quarterly | 1907 | 1909 | |
| The Inquisitor | Boston | bibelot | 1907 | 1907 | ||
| The New Age | GB | inter | weekly | 1907 | 1938 | edited by A. R. Orage through 1922; a major site for debates over modernism. Contributors include, Shaw, Wells, K. Mansfield, B. Hastings, Pound, Hulme, H. Read, E. Muir, W. Sickert; visual art by Beerbohm, Sickert, Gaudier-Brzeska, Ginner, Nevinson, cartoons by T. Titt, others; 1907-22 done by MJP; No Rep. |
| The Story-Teller | GB | popular | monthly | 1907 | 1937 | Called "the best all-fiction magazine of its day" by M. Ashley; published work by H. Caine, E. P. Oppenheim, M. Bowen, O. Onions, M. Leblanc, A. and C. Askew, J. Futrelle, R. Sabatini, G. K. Chesterton, S. Rohmer, A. Bennett, R. Kipling, and, in later years, F. S. Fitzgerald, D. Sayers, and P. Gallico. |
| The Red Magazine | GB | popular | monthly | 1908 | 1939 | Poised between adult and juvenile fiction, and sometimes called The Harmsworth Red Magazine, it published work by F. H. Evans, E. M. Dell, G. Leroux, J. London, O. Onions, R. Sabatini, O. Henry, R. Newton, R. W. Chambers, Rider Haggard, E. Nesbit, U. Bloom, and ultimately F. Scott Fitzgerald. |
| Little Book | Milwaukee | bibelot | 1908 | 1908 | ||
| The Mask | Italy | little | quarterly | 1908 | 1929 | English language; edited by Gordon Craig; devoted to the theatre; Craig is the major voice; suspended 1915-18, ; Rep. Blom |
| Midget Magazine | New York | bibelot | 1908 | 1909 | ||
| The English Review | GB | little | monthly | 1908 | 1937 | Edited by F. M. Hueffer for first year, A. Harrison for many more. Contributors included Hardy, Conrad, Wells James, Galsworthy, other major figures; merged with the National Review in 1937 |
| The Fra: A Journal of Affirmation | US | little | monthly | 1908 | 1917 | Edited and published in East Aurora, NY, by Elbert Hubbard, this magazine was associated with the Roycroft branch of the Arts and Crafts movement. Stephen Crane and Carl Sandburg were among the contributors. It was large in format, with a lot of advertising. Hubbard and his wife died when the Lusitania was sunk and the magazine ended two years later. Over the course of time, the sub-title changed to "Exponent of the American Philosophy" and then to "For Philistines and Roycrofters." |
| Moods | US | little | monthly | 1908 | 1918 | suspended '10 |
| Pink Pill | Hobson, Montana | bibelot | 1909 | 1909 | ||
| The Progress Magazine | New York | bibelot | 1909 | 1909 | ||
| Thrush | GB | little | monthly | 1909 | 1910 | Hoffman/Ulrich missed this one |
| Friday Literary Review | US | popular | weekly | 1909 | 1914 | supplement to the Chicago Evening Post |
| Nash's Magazine | GB | popular | monthly | 1909 | 1950 | Absorbed Pall Mall in 1914. Sold to W. R. Hearst in 1909. Went through various shifts of title and mergers over the years. A fiction magazine. Authors included Rider Haggard, Kipling, Le Queux, Edith Nesbit, Mrs. Belloc Lowndes, K. Tynan, J. London, C. Mackenzie, G. Morris, E. Glyn, B. Tarkington, J. Galsworthy, E. P. Oppenheim, J. K. Jermoe, M. Sinclair, M. Corelli, O. Wister, H. G. Wells, S. Maugham, and A. Loos; artwork by Gibson, Winter, Foster, and Harriston Fisher |
| Everybody's Story Magazine | GB | popular | monthly | 1909 | 1914 | Second series started in 1913 as Everyone's. Pulbished light, moral stories. |
| The New Magazine | GB | popular | monthly | 1909 | 1930 | Originally published by Casell. Writers included Frank Shaw, Baroness Orczy, M. Leblanc, S. Rohmer, W. Le Queux, and "Sapper." |
| The Suffragist | GB | little | 1909 | |||
| The Village Magazine | US | little | unique | 1910 | 1910 | revised version in 1920, 1925 |
| The Open Window | GB | little | monthly | 1910 | 1911 | Short-lived by high quality; published drama, fiction, poetry, art, including fiction by E. M. Forster and K. Mansfield |
| Nineteen-Ten Magazine | US | little | irregular | 1910 | 1910 | |
| Stylus | NY | bibelot | 1910 | 1910 | ||
| The Peace Pipe | Seattle, WA | bibelot | 1910 | 1910 | ||
| Caxton | Pittsfield, MA. | bibelot | 1910 | 1915 | ||
| The Insurgent | Los Gatos, CA | bibelot | 1910 | 1910 | ||
| The Crisis | US | little | monthly | 1910 | 1940 | Edited by W. E. B. Du Bois, who wrote much of the content of the magazine including articles on lynching, the color line, racial congresses, colored women's clubs, columns on "men of month"; photographs, and stories, articles, or poems by Jessie Fauset (who was an important influence, and became literary editor in 1919), William Pickens, Mary W. Ovington, Leslie Pinckney Hill, William Stanley Braithwaite, and Charles W. Chesnutt. |
| Idler | East Orange, NJ | bibelot | monthly | 1910 | 1912 | |
| It | Lancaster, PA | bibelot | 1910 | 1910 | ||
| Vision | US | little | quarterly | 1911 | 1912 | |
| The Masses | US | little | monthly | 1911 | 1917 | A major little mag; strong visual art by Bellows and others; writing by J. Reed, L. Untermeyer, C. Sandburg, W. Lippmann, A. Giovannitti and others; suspended Sep-Nov., 1912; a number of editors, including M. Eastman and F. Dell; Kraus Rep |
| The Magazine Maker | New York | bibelot | 1911 | 1911 | ||
| Trend | NY | bibelot | 1911 | 1915 | ||
| Lotus | New York | bibelot | 1911 | 1919 | ||
| Wales | GB | inter | monthly | 1911 | 1914 | |
| The Freewoman | GB | little | monthly | 1911 | 1913 | made important reflexively by preceding Egoist; became New Freewoman; not reprinted |
| The Irish Review | Ireland | little | monthly | 1911 | 1914 | Contributors include W. B. Yeats, P. Colum, AE, K. Tynan, J. Stephens, J. Eglinton, F. Reid, E. Farjeon. |
| The Westminster Magazine | US | little | quarterly | 1911 | 1944 | absorbed Bozart and Contemporary Verse |
| Rhythm | GB | little | quarterly | 1911 | 1913 | Especially strong in modernist visual art, with Fergusson as art editor; artworks by Picasso, Gaudier-Brzeska, J. Dismorr and others; writing by Mansfield and Murry dominates.; Edited by J. M. Murry, with K. Mansfield and J. D. Fergusson. MJP edition. |
| The Modern School | US | little | monthly | 1912 | 1922 | The organ of the anarchist modern school movement; began as newletter in 1911; may have continued after 1922; artists and poets contributed. |
| The Magpie | mixed | monthly | 1912 | 1914 | Short lived, pulpy in format, but serious as a fiction magazine. Published work by F. M. Hueffer's younger brother Oliver, and by such writers as Compton Mackenzie, Max Rittenberg, Gouverneur Morris, Upton Sinclair, Tolstoy, and Roy Vickers. | |
| Gold Bug | Chicago | bibelot | 1912 | 1912 | ||
| Poetry | US | little | monthly | 1912 | current | a major little magazine that lasted like few others; poets and critics published here are a Who's Who of modern poetry and criticism; they include Pound, Eliot, V. Lindsay, Aldington, H. D., W. C. Williams, D. H. Lawrence, Wallace Stevens, and others; Founded and edited in Chicago by Harriet Monroe; microfilm |
| The Wild Hawk | US | little | monthly | 1912 | 1936 | became The Plowshare in 1916 |
| The Woman's Protest | US | little | monthly | 1912 | 1918 | Pub. of the National Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage |
| The Messenger | New York | bibelot | 1912 | 1912 | ||
| The Antidote | GB | little | irregular | 1912 | 1915 | Backed by Lord Alfred Douglas, opposed modernism, published Sassoon |
| The Tripod | GB | little | monthly Oct-June | 1912 | 1913 | |
| The Poetry Review | GB | little | monthly/quarterly | 1912 | 1969 | began as The Poetical Gazette in 1909, continued as Poetry Review after 1969 |
| The Poetry Journal | US | little | monthly | 1912 | 1918 | occasionally suspended |
| The New Freewoman | GB | little | semi-monthly | 1913 | 1914 | In this transitional phase of the magazine, Pound and Aldington become influential, W. C. Williams is published.; inter stage between The Freewoman and The Egoist; edited by Dora Marsden; supported by Harriet Weaver; Kraus Rep. |
| The Suffragist | US | little | weekly | 1913 | 1921 | Became monthly in 1920--official pub. of National Woman's Party |
| The Blue Review | GB | little | monthly | 1913 | 1913 | mainly Murry and Mansfield; followed Rhythm; Cass reprint; MJP edition |
| The Golden Hynde | GB | little | irregular | 1913 | 1914 | |
| The New Statesman | GB | inter | weekly | 1913 | 1931 | Founded to put science into social management. Contributors; G. B. Shaw, B. and S. Webb, D. MacCarthy, J. C. Squire, C. Sharp (Ed.), E. Davies.; continued with title changes after 1931 |
| Poetry and Drama | GB | little | quarterly | 1913 | 1914 | |
| The Glebe | US | little | irregular | 1913 | 1914 | |
| The Lantern | US | little | irregular | 1913 | 1913 | |
| Poetry Journal | Boston | bibelot | 1913 | 1914 | ||
| The Premier Magazine | GB | popular | monthly | 1914 | 1931 | Ran in three different series and was published fortnightly from 1919 to1923. Writers included Rohmer, Sabatini, Le Queux, A. P. Terhune, H. Belloc, G. K. Chesterton, J. K. Jerome, and A. Abdullah |
| Vanity Fair | US | popular | monthly | 1914 | 1936 | |
| The New Republic | US | popular | weekly | 1914 | current | suspended Oct 1914 to Nov 1919 |
| Colour | inter | monthly | 1914 | 1932 | Ran in three series with slight gaps between them. Primarily an art magazine, with work by F. Brangwyn, E. Dulac, W. R. Flint, A. John, A. O. Spare, J. B. Yeats and others, as well as art criticism, it also published fiction. | |
| New Numbers | GB | little | four issues | 1914 | 1914 | |
| The Egoist | GB | little | bi-monthly | 1914 | 1919 | One of the best known little mags; published major works by Eliot, Joyce, and others; followed New Freewoman; Kraus Rep |
| The Little Review | US/ France | little | irregular | 1914 | 1929 | One of the most important little mags; contributors included Anderson, Lindsay, Bodenheim, Pound, Joyce, Crane, Aldington, W. Lewis, Cocteau, Apollinaire, Tzara, K. Burke; Edited by Margaret Anderson and Jane Heap; Kraus Rep. |
| The Phoenix | US | little | monthly | 1914 | 1916 | followed Papyrus |
| Blast | GB | little | two issues | 1914 | 1915 | Vorticist manifesto, fiction by Lewis, Ford, West, art by Lewis, Nevinson, others. Criticism by Lewis, Pound, others. Facsimile by Gingko available. MJP edition. |
| Trimmed Lamp | Chicago | bibelot | 1914 | 1914 | ||
| Rogue | US | little | semi-monthly | 1915 | 1916 | |
| The Gypsy | GB | little | two issues | 1915 | 1916 | |
| Signature | GB | little | three issues | 1915 | 1915 | |
| Others | US | little | monthly | 1915 | 1919 | Contributors: W. C. Williams, W. Stevens, M. Moore, Mina Loy, E. Pound, C. Aiken, C. Sandburg, T. S. Eliot, A. Lowell, H.D., Djuna Barnes, Man Ray, S. Cannell, L. Ridge, M. Duchamp |
| Poesy | GB | little | irregular | 1915 | 1917 | |
| Inwhich | US | little | monthly | 1915 | 1916 | |
| The Lantern | US | little | monthly | 1915 | 1918 | |
| Bruno Chap Books | US | little | irregular | 1915 | 1916 | see other Bruno publications |
| Greenwich Village | US | little | semi-monthly | 1915 | 1915 | a Bruno publication |
| The Minaret | US | little | monthly | 1915 | 1926 | suspended 1917-1923 |
| Bruno's Weekly | US | little | weekly | 1915 | 1916 | see other Bruno publications |
| The Midland | US | little | monthly | 1915 | 1933 | absorbed by The Frontier |
| The Soil | US | little | monthly | 1916 | 1917 | |
| Contemporary Verse | US | little | monthly | 1916 | 1929 | |
| The Ajax | US | little | monthly | 1916 | 1921 | |
| The Quarterly Notebook | US | little | quarterly | 1916 | 1917 | |
| The Seven Arts | US | little | monthly | 1916 | 1917 | an important little mag, for one with such a short run. Published poetry by Frost, Sandburg, A. Lowell, and others; fiction by S. Andereson, E. O'Neill, and D. H. Lawrence; criticism by R. Bourne, V. W. Brooks, W. Frank, Oppenheim; absorbed by The Dial; AMS Rep. |
| The Poetry Review of America | US | little | monthly | 1916 | 1917 | |
| The Chimaera | US | little | monthly | 1916 | 1916 | |
| Form | GB | little | quarterly | 1916 | 1922 | suspended 1917-21 |
| The Pagan | US | little | monthly | 1916 | 1922 | |
| Ink Pot | NY | bibelot | 1916 | 1916 | ||
| Quarterly Review | Kansas, MO | bibelot | quarterly | 1916 | 1917 | |
| The Palatine Review | GB | little | quarterly | 1916 | 1917 | |
| The Half Century Magazine | GB | little | monthly | 1916 | 1925 | Published in Chicago, it called itself "A Colored Monthly for the Businessman and the Homemaker." |
| The Stratford Journal | US | little | irregular | 1916 | 1925 | |
| The Lyric | US | little | monthly | 1917 | 1919 | suspended in 1918 |
| Rongwrong | US | little | irregular | 1917 | 1917 | |
| Wheels | GB | little | annual | 1917 | 1921 | Ed. E. Sitwell; Contribs include other Sitwells, N. Cunard, A. Huxley, I. Tree, E. W. Tennant |
| The Sansculotte | US | little | monthly | 1917 | 1917 | |
| Pagan | NY | bibelot | 1917 | 1920 | ||
| To-Day | GB | little | monthly | 1917 | 1923 | Contributors included Yeats and the Georgian Poets, but also Ezra Pound and T. S. Eliot; Jackson wrote favorably about J. Joyce.; earlier version, 1893-1905 published fiction by Stevenson, Kipling, Harte, and others; this version edited by H. Jackson emerged from T. P. Weekly but was a new magazine; bound editions, no Rep. |
| Lloyd's Magazine | GB | popular | monthly | 1917 | 1923 | Incorporated an earlier magazine devoted to mothers and babies, this magazine began with work by Edgar Wallace and Sax Rohmer. The amount of fiction kept increasing, and writers like Conrad, Beresford, and Katherine Tynan appeared. |
| Plowshare | Woodstock, NY | bibelot | 1917 | 1935 | ||
| The Madrigal | US | little | monthly | 1917 | 1918 | |
| Bruno's | US | little | weekly | 1917 | 1917 | see other Bruno magazines |
| Touchstone | NY | bibelot | 1917 | 1921 | ||
| The Blind Man | US | little | irregular | 1917 | 1917 | A dada-ist journal |
| Art and Letters | GB | little | quarterly | 1917 | 1920 | Has been situated in "the moment of transition to modernism"--Editors Rutter, Ginner, Gilman. Poetry by Sassoon, Owen, Rosenberg, the Sitwells, Eliot; criticism by Herbert Read, Aldington; Facsimile edition by Frank Cass, London, 1970 (ELM NO. 16) |
| The Messenger | US | little | monthly | 1917 | 1928 | Published in New York by A. Phillip Randolph, labor organizer of The Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, and subtitled the "World's Greatest Negro Monthly," it called itself the "only radical Negro magazine in America. A very interesting magazine from both literary and political perspectives. |
| Slate | US | little | monthly | 1917 | 1917 | |
| Quill | NY | bibelot | 1917 | 1919 | ||
| The Sonnet | US | little | bimonthly | 1917 | 1921 | |
| The Liberator | US | little | monthly | 1918 | 1924 | follows The Masses |
| Youth | US | little | bimonthly | 1918 | 1919 | |
| Bruno's Bohemia | US | little | monthly | 1918 | 1918 | See other Bruno's |
| The Marionette | Italy | little | monthly | 1918 | 1919 | English language |
| Bruno's Review of Life, Love, and Letters | US | little | monthly | 1919 | 1919 | See other Bruno magazines |
| Hutchinson's Story Magazine | GB | populaar | monthly | 1919 | 1929 | Did a lot of serializing, with such writers as Baroness Orczy, Rider Haggard, "Sapper," Ruby Ayres, and R. Sabatini. Some slight changes in title. |
| Coterie | GB | little | quarterly | 1919 | 1921 | Contributors include Eliot, Huxley, Aiken, Aldington, Read, the Sitwells, Blunden, Owen, H.D., Amy Lowell, and artists Hamnett, Modigliani Zadkine; KrausRep. |
| The Damn | US | little | irregular | 1919 | 1919 | |
| S 4 N | US | little | monthly | 1919 | 1925 | combined with Modern Review 1926 |
| Voices | GB | little | irregular | 1919 | 1921 | |
| The Free Spirit | US | little | monthly | 1919 | 1921 | suspended 1920 |
| The Owl | GB | little | irregular | 1919 | 1923 | Robert Graves edited; published Georgian poets and others; art by Pamela Bianco; MJP edition. |
| The Oxford Outlook | GB | little | irregular | 1919 | 1932 | |
| Pan | GB | mixed | monthly | 1919 | 1924 | Ran in three series during itsshort life. Switched from weekly to monthly in 1920 and published more fiction, including work by R. G. Wodehouse, E. D. Biggers, R. H. Davis, E. Wallace, E. L. White, and R. Connell ("The Most Dangerous Game"). |
| The Monthly Chapbook | GB | little | monthly | 1919 | 1925 | follows Poetry and Drama, becomes The Chapbook in 1920 |
| Modernist | US | little | unknown | 1919 | 1919 | |
| Playboy | US | little | irregular | 1919 | 1924 | suspended 1921-1923 |
| Sonnet | Williamsport, PA | bibelot | 1919 | 1919 | ||
| Aengus | Ireland | little | irregular | 1919 | 1919 | |
| The London Mercury | GB | inter | monthly | 1919 | 1939 | A Georgian journal, relatively conservative, even anti-modernist, in literary matters; contributors included Hardy, Gosse, Brooke, Davies, De la Mare, Frost, Yeats, Lindsay, Blunden, Aiken, Lawrence, V. Woolf, K. Mansfield, M. Praz, E. Muir.; Edited by J. C. Squire until 1934 |
| Good Morning | US | little | weekly | 1919 | 1921 | followed by Art Young Quarterly |
| Drama | GB | professional | monthly | 1919 | 1939 | bimonthly first year |
| Blackfriars | GB | religious | monthly | 1920 | 1964 | incorporated Catholic Review (1913-18) |
| New Numbers | US | little | ? | 1920 | ? | |
| The Chapbook | GB | little | monthly | 1920 | 1925 | succeeded Poetry and Drama and Monthly Chapbook |
| The Apple of Beauty and Discord | GB | little | quarterly | 1920 | 1921 | Primarily devoted to visual art, criticism by Pound and others, art by Nash, Latour, Steinlen, Hokusai, Craig, Brangwyn, Ferguson, Conder, A. John, G. Raverat, Gaudier-Brzeska and others |
| The Freeman | US | inter | weekly | 1920 | 1924 | |
| All's Well, or The Mirror Repolished | US | little | monthly | 1920 | 1935 | Follows Reedy's Mirror |
| Bruno's Review of Two Worlds | US | little | monthly | 1920 | 1922 | See other Bruno's |
| The Competitor | US | little | monthly | 1920 | 1921 | Short-lived magazine aimed at the Black middle class, published in Pittsburgh. |
| Contact | US | little | irregular | 1920 | 1932 | New Series begins in 1932 |
| Parabalou | US | little | irregular | 1920 | 1921 | |
| The Saturday Review of Literature | US | inter | weekly | 1920 | recent | |
| Time and Tide | GB | inter | weekly | 1920 | 1971 | |
| The Frontier | US | little | three yearly | 1920 | 1939 | |
| Rainbow | US | little | monthly | 1920 | ? | |
| Raab's Review | US | little | monthly | 1920 | ? | |
| Voices | US | little | bimonthly | 1921 | recent | |
| The Tyro | GB | little | two issues | 1921 | 1922 | W Lewis edited----Very much a Lewis production, it emphasized visual art and included critical writing by T. S. Eliot, H. Read, J. Rodker, and Lewis himself; Cass reprint.; New Age edition. |
| Tempo | US | little | irregular | 1921 | 1923 | |
| The New Pen | US | little | monthly | 1921 | 1922 | |
| The Lyric West | US | little | monthly | 1921 | 1927 | |
| The Saturnian | US | little | irregular | 1921 | 1922 | |
| The Reviewer | US | little | semi-monthly | 1921 | 1925 | |
| The American Intercollegiate Magazine | US | little | monthly | 1921 | 1922 | |
| L'Alouette | US | little | very irregular | 1921 | 1938 | |
| Youth | US | little | monthly | 1921 | 1922 | |
| The Measure | US | little | monthly | 1921 | 1926 | |
| The Nation and Athenaeum | GB | inter | weekly | 1921 | 1931 | merger of The Nation and The Athenaeum |
| Broom | US and abroad | little | monthly | 1921 | 1924 | Kraus Rep, with ads |
| Laughing Horses | US | little | irregular | 1922 | 1939 | |
| Art Young Quarterly | US | little | one issue | 1922 | 1922 | |
| Secession | European/US | little | irregular | 1922 | 1924 | |
| The Golden Hind | GB | little | quarterly | 1922 | 1924 | |
| The Fugitive | US | little | bimonthly | 1922 | 1925 | |
| Caprice | US | little | irregular | 1922 | 1923 | |
| Clay | US | little | quarterly | 1922 | 1923 | |
| The Adelphi Magazine | US | little | one issue | 1922 | 1922 | |
| The Wave | US/Eur | little | irregular | 1922 | 1924 | |
| The Poet's Scroll | US | little | monthly | 1922 | 1934 | |
| The Nomad | US | little | quarterly | 1922 | 1924 | |
| Modern Review | US | little | quarterly | 1922 | 1924 | joined S 4 N in 1926 |
| The Milwaukee Arts Monthly | US | little | monthly | 1922 | 1923 | |
| Wave | Chicago | bibelot | 1922 | 1924 | ||
| Manuscripts | US | little | irregular | 1922 | 1925 | |
| Criterion | GB | little | quarterly | 1922 | 1939 | |
| Bear | NY | bibelot | 1926 | 1927 | ||
| The Occident | US | little | monthly | pre 1920 | post 1925 | |
| Verde Mons | Waits River, VT | bibelot | ||||
| The Limner | NY | bibelot | monthly | Illustrated. |