The Bloomsbury Review (TBR) was a nationally distributed literary magazine founded by Thomas Auer (1953–2003) in Denver, Colorado in 1980.
[1] It focused on small, regional, university, and international presses, as well as "smaller" titles from large publishers.
The cover story was a short piece about the Bloomsbury Group, and the featured review was on "Perjury: The Hiss-Chambers Case" by Allen Weinstein.
Most newspapers had either little or lousy book coverage, and the few general-interest magazines that made room for book reviews tended to cover the same best-selling titles and big-name authors," Auer wrote in an essay published in TBR's 20th anniversary issue.
Ricciardi House Accordionist: Steven C. Ballinger Secret Agent: James R. Hepworth Champion & Slayer of Great Beasts: Harlan Ellison