The Story-Teller was a monthly British pulp fiction magazine that ran from 1907 to 1937. Initially published by Cassell and Co, The Story-Teller was edited by Newman Flower from its debut in April 1907 until 1928, when Clarence Winchester became the editor. The magazine was taken over by Amalgamated Press in 1927. In all 367 issues were published during the magazine's 30-year lifespan. From the November 1936 issue, the title became Storyteller. With the change came a new-look cover and numbering system, beginng with Volume 1, Number 1.
Notable for having first published some of the works of G. K. Chesterton, William Hope Hodgson, Rudyard Kipling, Katherine Mansfield, Edgar Wallace, and H. G. Wells, the magazine also included works by Australian authors such as James Francis Dwyer.