''Story'' is a literary magazine published out of Columbus, Ohio. It has been published on and off since 1931. ''Story'' is a member of the Council of Literary Magazines and Presses and receives support from the Greater Columbus Arts Council and the Ohio Arts Council.
History
''Story'' was founded in 1931 by journalist-editor
Whit Burnett and his first wife,
Martha Foley, in
Vienna
Vienna ( ; ; ) is the capital city, capital, List of largest cities in Austria, most populous city, and one of Federal states of Austria, nine federal states of Austria. It is Austria's primate city, with just over two million inhabitants. ...
, Austria. Showcasing short stories by new authors, 67 copies of the debut issue (April–May, 1931) were mimeographed in Vienna, and two years later, ''Story'' moved to New York City, where Burnett and Foley created The Story Press in 1936.
By the late 1930s, the circulation of ''Story'' had climbed to 21,000 copies. Authors introduced in ''Story'' included
Charles Bukowski
Henry Charles Bukowski ( ; born Heinrich Karl Bukowski, ; August 16, 1920 – March 9, 1994) was a German Americans, German-American poet, novelist, and short story writer. His writing was influenced by the social, cultural, and economic ambien ...
,
Erskine Caldwell,
John Cheever
John William Cheever (May 27, 1912 – June 18, 1982) was an American short story writer and novelist. He is sometimes called "the Chekhov of the suburbs". His fiction is mostly set on the Upper East Side of Manhattan; the Westchester suburbs ...
,
James T. Farrell,
Joseph Heller,
J. D. Salinger,
Tennessee Williams and
Richard Wright. Other authors in the pages of ''Story'' included
Ludwig Bemelmans,
Carson McCullers and
William Saroyan. The magazine sponsored various awards (WPA, Armed Forces), and it held an annual college fiction contest.
Burnett's second wife, Hallie Southgate Burnett, began collaborating with him in 1942. During this period, ''Story'' published the early work of
Truman Capote
Truman Garcia Capote ( ; born Truman Streckfus Persons; September 30, 1924 – August 25, 1984) was an American novelist, screenwriter, playwright, and actor. Several of his short stories, novels, and plays have been praised as literary classics ...
,
John Knowles
John Knowles (; September 16, 1926November 29, 2001) was an American novelist best known for ''A Separate Peace'' (1959).
Biography
Knowles was born on September 16, 1926, in Fairmont, West Virginia, the son of James M. Knowles, a purchasing ag ...
and
Norman Mailer
Nachem Malech Mailer (January 31, 1923 – November 10, 2007), known by his pen name Norman Kingsley Mailer, was an American writer, journalist and filmmaker. In a career spanning more than six decades, Mailer had 11 best-selling books, at least ...
. ''Story'' was briefly published in book form during the early 1950s, returning to a magazine format in 1960. Due to a lack of funds, ''Story'' folded in 1967, but it maintained its reputation through the Story College Creative Awards, which Burnett directed from 1966 to 1971.
''Story'' was revived in 1989 as a quarterly by the husband and wife team of publisher Richard Rosenthal and editor
Lois Rosenthal, fulfilling their promise to Burnett that they would relaunch the magazine someday.
The magazine was published by
F&W Publications in Cincinnati. With a circulation of 40,000, ''Story'' was a five-time finalist and two-time winner of the
National Magazine Award for fiction. The Rosenthals featured such established authors as
Andrea Barrett,
Barry Lopez,
Joyce Carol Oates
Joyce Carol Oates (born June 16, 1938) is an American writer. Oates published her first book in 1963, and has since published 58 novels, a number of plays and novellas, and many volumes of short stories, poetry, and nonfiction. Her novels ''Black ...
, and
Carol Shields
Carol Ann Shields (née Warner; June 2, 1935 – July 16, 2003) was an American-born Canadian novelist and short story writer. She is best known for her 1993 novel ''The Stone Diaries'', which won the U.S. Pulitzer Prize for Fiction as well as t ...
while also introducing new authors such as
Junot Díaz
Junot Díaz ( ; born December 31, 1968) is a Dominican American writer, creative writing professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and a former fiction editor at '' Boston Review''. Central to Díaz's work is the immigrant experience ...
,
Elizabeth Graver, and
Abraham Rodriguez. With the sale of F&W forthcoming, the Rosenthals brought ''Story'' to an end with the Winter 2000 issue.
Having obtained the rights for the name of the magazine from Lois Rosenthal,
[
] in 2014, Travis Kurowski relaunched Story as a double-side annual publication out of York College. Authors published during this era include
Etgar Keret,
Tao Lin,
Lincoln Michel,
Timothy Liu,
Mary Miller, and Christine No. After three issues, the magazine shut down in 2016.
Two years later, Michael Nye revived Story, establishing the magazine as the cornerstone of a non-profit, independent arts organization based in Columbus, Ohio. The revival issue appeared in March 2019, and featured new work by Marilyn Abildskov,
Yohanca Delgado,
Michael Martone, Phong Nguyen,
Anne Valente, Dionne Irving, and Claudia Hinz. Each issue features the work of an Ohio artist on its cover and writing by an Ohio author in its pages. The triannual magazine publishes in February, June, and November.
Story has consistently been one of the first to publish writers who have later been awarded literary honors such as the National Book Award, the Pulitzer Prize, and the PEN/Hemingway Award, and received grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, the National Institute of Arts and Letters, and the Guggenheim Foundation.
O. Henry Awards
Conrad Aiken was the first ''Story'' writer to win an
O. Henry Award, when his short story "The Impulse" (April 1933) was honored. The following year,
William Saroyan's classic "
The Daring Young Man on the Flying Trapeze" won the Third Place Award. Another Saroyan ''Story''-published work, "The Three Swimmers and the Educated Grocer", would also claim an O. Henry Award in 1940.
In 1935,
Nelson Algren won the first of his three
O. Henry Awards for his short story "The Brother's House". He was one of three writers published in ''Story'' that year who were honored (the other winners were Dorothy McCleary for "Little Elise" and Jerome Weidman for "My Father Sits in the Dark"). The following year, Story scored three more O. Henry Award winners (Ernest Brace for "Silent Whistle"; Elizabeth Coatsworth for "The Visit" and Eric Knight for "The Marne"); followed by four winners in 1937 (Hamlen Hunt for "The Saluting Doll"; J.M. McKeon for "The Gladiator"; Katherine Patten for "Man Among Men"; and Prudencio de Pereda for "The Spaniard" in 1937). Placing multiple winners into the annual O. Henry Award anthology became an annual tradition for ''Story'' into the mid-1940s.
Algren's friend
Richard Wright won Second prize in the O. Henry Awards for his ''Story''-published "Fire and Cloud" in 1938. Hallie Southgate Abbett's story "Eighteenth Summer" won Third Prize in 1941, while in 1943, Third Prize was awarded to
William Fifield's "The Fisherman of Patzcuaro".
Between 1934 and 1946, 25 writers had won 27 O. Henry Awards, including
Irwin Shaw (for "God on a Friday Night" in 1939) and
Mary O'Hara, whose 1941 O. Henry Award-winning "
My Friend Flicka" which served as the basis for a
popular movie. (Along with Saroyan, Hamlen Hunt was a double-winner.) Most winners from ''Story'' did not win a top prize (First, Second or Third), but were honored by being cited as one of the best stories of their respective year. The honor carried with it the privilege of being published in the annual anthology of short stories by O. Henry Award winners.
After the 1989 revival of the magazine, ''Story'' writers continued the O. Henry Award-winning tradition.
References
Further reading
* Foley, Martha. ''The story of Story magazine: a memoir'' (1980. London. WW Norton & Company)
External links
Archives of ''Story Magazine'' and Story Press, 1931-1999at Princeton University Manuscripts Division (archived in 2011)
''Story'' (September 1964): "What Kind of Person Was Frank Harris? A Cold Look" by Whit Burnett (full text)
{{DEFAULTSORT:Story (magazine)
1931 establishments in Austria
2000 disestablishments in Ohio
Quarterly magazines published in the United States
Literary magazines published in Austria
Defunct magazines published in Austria
Defunct literary magazines published in the United States
Defunct literary magazines published in Europe
Magazines established in 1931
Magazines disestablished in 2000
Magazines published in Cincinnati
Magazines published in Vienna