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The Monthly Review (London)

English periodical From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Monthly Review (London)
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The Monthly Review (1749–1845) was an English periodical founded by Ralph Griffiths, a Nonconformist bookseller. The first periodical in England to offer reviews,[1] it featured the novelist and poet Oliver Goldsmith as an early contributor. Griffiths himself, and likely his wife Isabella Griffiths, contributed review articles to the periodical. Later contributors included Dr. Charles Burney, John Cleland, Theophilus Cibber, James Grainger, Anna Letitia Barbauld, Elizabeth Moody, and Tobias Smollett—who would go on to establish the Monthly's competitor in 1756, The Critical Review.[2] William Kenrick, the "superlative scoundrel", was editor from 1759 to 1766.[3]

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Title page of the first issue (2nd edition) of The Monthly Review, May 1749
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Publishing history of The Monthly Review

  • Volumes 1–81, May 1749 – December 1789;
  • {2d ser.} v. 1–108, January 1790 – November 1825;
  • new {3d} ser., v. 1–15, January 1826 – December 1830;
  • new {4th} ser., v. 1–45, January 1831 – December 1844. (The four-month volumes in this series are numbered I, II, and III on the title page, restarting at I each January, but some libraries and indexes number the volumes continuously from 1831.)

Many libraries have incorrectly cataloged the periodical as the London Monthly Review.[4]

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Format

Each issue of the Monthly was divided into two sections: longer reviews of several pages were in the front section, short reviews of lesser works were featured in the back Monthly Catalogue, divided by genre headings.

See also

References

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