Editor | Brendan Barrington |
---|---|
Categories | [Culture], Literature |
Frequency | quarterly |
First issue | 2000 |
Country | Ireland |
Based in | Dublin |
Language | English |
Website | www.thedublinreview.com |
The Dublin Review is a quarterly magazine that publishes essays, reportage, autobiography, travel writing, criticism and fiction. It was launched in December 2000 by Brendan Barrington, who remains the editor and publisher, assisted by Nora Mahony. An anthology of non-fiction pieces from the magazine, The Dublin Review Reader, appeared in 2007.[1][2] The magazine has been noted for the range of its contributors, which includes new writers from Ireland and elsewhere. In his introduction to the Reader, Brendan Barrington wrote:
"If forced to articulate a governing idea behind the magazine, I might offer this: that the essay in its various guises is every bit as much an art form as the short story or poem, and ought to be treated as such."[3]
The magazine is presented "in book form, with minimal design, the writing presented without adornment, without any introduction, explanation of setting, background or even the usual obvious pointers to whether the piece is fiction or non-fiction".[4]
Editor Brendan Barrington is also Senior Editor at Penguin Ireland, a division of the Penguin Group.