Slightly Foxed

Slightly Foxed is a British quarterly literary magazine. Its primary focus is books and book culture. It was established by former John Murray editors Hazel Wood and Gail Pirkis. Notable authors to have written for the magazine include Penelope Lively, Richard Mabey, Diana Athill, Ronald Blythe and Robert Macfarlane.

Instead of books currently marketed by big publishers, Slightly Foxed tends to examine older and more obscure titles. Its title comes from the term "slightly foxed" as a description of a book's physical quality, commonly used in the second-hand book trade to describe minor foxing, the occurrence of brown spots on older paper.

As well as the magazine itself, Slightly Foxed has a books imprint. Original books published by the imprint include Philip Evans' Country Doctor's Common Place Book  and Charles Phillipson’s Letters to Michael (selected by the Telegraph as one of the best books of 2021). The imprint has also reissued a number of classic works and children's books, including Rosemary Sutcliff's novels about Roman Britain and the Carey novels of Ronald Welch.

Since 2014, the magazine has sponsored the Slightly Foxed Best First Biography Prize for the best first biography or literary memoir published each year. In 2023, the prize was won jointly by Katherine Rundell for her biography of John Donne, Super-Infinite, and Osman Yousefzada for his memoir The Go-Between. Winners from previous years include Edmund Gordon for The Invention of Angela Carter and Alan Cumming for Not My Father’s Son.

In addition to the quarterly magazine, Slightly Foxed produces a podcast about books, book culture and writers.

Between 2009 and 2016 Slightly Foxed ran a bookshop of the same name on London's Gloucester Road.

The magazine's offices are based at Hoxton Square, London, N1.