This collection of new fiction, poetry, memoir and art showcases the work of doctors who are also...
Broken Britain? This issue of Granta is a celebration of the nation’s past and present, its...
In this issue John Barth contemplates the end of writing fiction. Alice Munro explores the...
Horror is everywhere – in cinema, in fiction, in real life. In this issue Paul...
A street vendor in Tunisia, an American marine going home and a signals operator on...
From Ghana to Great Britain, New Delhi to New York, the balance of power remains...
First there was the traveller; then the word was emigrants. In America, they turned into...
From Borges to Bolaño, the Spanish language has given us some of the most beloved...
Filled with almost 200 million people speaking nearly sixty languages, brought into nationhood under the...
We all go back: to the house or town where we were raised, to an...
Sex is our oldest obsession. For as long as we’ve been doing it, it has...
Most of us spend more time at work than anywhere else, but are our lives...
A special issue celebrating Chicago, and featuring original work by Aleksander Hemon, Nelson Algren, Peter...
Granta 107 features work by Kenzaburō Ōe, Mary Gaitksill, Mahmoud Darwish, Rupert Thomson, William T....
Granta 106 is a special issue devoted to new fiction and includes work by Paul...
In this issue, we reflect on people and places undergoing momentous change. Jeremy Treglown investigates...
Granta 104, new editor Alex Clark’s first issue, goes in search of fathers. We find...
At present, in Britain, there are at least 200 indigenous active terrorist cells being monitored...
As our conception and experience of nature changes, so too does the way we write...
Granta 101 features incisive reportage and investigative journalism alongside new fiction and a photo essay...