The New Yorker (1-year)

from: Conde' Nast Publications
The New Yorker (1-year)
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List Price: $196.18
Price: $39.95
You Save: $156.23 (80%)
Prices subject to change.

Availability: Usually ships in 4 to 6 weeks

Amazon.com Review:

Who Reads The New Yorker?
Readers of The New Yorker are curious about everything the world has to offer.When they become interested in a topic, they want to learn all about it. They are intellectual networkers, launching new ideas and shaping public opinion.And New Yorker readers are 'culture-preneurs" - the people who actively define the cultural scene.

What You Can Expect in Each Issue:

  • Talk of the Town: Short, witty takes on news and events in and around New York.
  • Reporting and essays: Award-winning explorations and revelations of world affairs and national issues, and personal reflection.
  • The Critics: Music, dance, theater, film, TV, and arts reviewed and illuminated.
  • Fiction and poetry: The best works by the finest writers of our time, both new and established.
  • Cartoons: The New Yorker's famous cartoons, with a unique wit all their own.
  • Features: The New Yorker is a collection of intelligent, penetrating, and funny voices.A signature mix of politics, world affairs, business, science, arts and letters attracts millions who come to The New Yorker to be informed, to be surprised, to laugh, and to be moved.Recent issues have included Hendrik Hertzberg on the Clinton and Obama showdown; Margaret Talbot on talking animals; James Surowiecki on the Bear Stearn's collapse; David Sedaris on smoking; and fiction by Annie Proulx.
Past Issues:

Contributors:
Among The New Yorker staff writers, Ken Auletta, who covers the media business and is an authority on the communications industry, is the author of 9 books, including the best-seller Three Blind Mice: How the TV Networks Lost Their Way.Seymour M. Hersh has written for The New Yorker since 1971.He has won numerous awards including the Pulitzer Prize for his investigations into the My Lai massacre, and is the author of eight books, including Chain of Command.The legendary John McPhee, on staff since 1965, teaches writing at Princeton.Jerome Groopman is a Harvard Medical School professor and the author of over 150 scientific articles.His latest book, The Anatomy of Hope, was a best-seller.

Magazine Layout:
The New Yorker is a readers' magazine.Articles range from short Talk of the Town pieces to in-depth explorations of politics and world affairs.Short reviews of restaurants, movies and the arts in Goings On About Town can be quickly skimmed, while, at the back of the book, longer, richer reviews of selected books, plays and movies can be read at a more leisurely pace.And the dozen or so cartoons in each issue offer their sheer wit and entertainment.

Comparisons to Other Magazines:
The New Yorker offers the long-form journalism that has all but disappeared in today's media landscape.New Yorker writers are not bound by daily deadlines, and it is not uncommon for them to spend months working on an article.Nor are the writers constrained by a mandated point of view. They are free to follow a story wherever it leads.

Advertising:
Advertisers include financial service companies, car-makers, luxury goods purveyors, hotels, publishers, and arts events.Small ads throughout the magazine offer a boutique-style shopping experience for everything from customized jewelry and Panama hats, to expedition ship cruises and villa rentals.

Awards:
The New Yorker is the most-honored magazine in publishing history.It has won 48 National Magazine Awards, the magazine world's equivalent of the Oscars.Its contributors have won many of the major awards, including The Nobel prize and The Pulitzer prize.In 2008, two of the Pulitzer-Prize winning books included work that originally appeared in The New Yorker: The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Diaz won the fiction prize and Time and Materials by Robert Hass won for poetry.


Amazon.com Review:
Founded in 1925, The New Yorker hardly changed for its first 60 years, both in its dry, type-heavy design and in its reputation as a writer's and reader's haven. In 1987 it was on only its second editor when management decided to shake things up. A rocky decade ensued, but The New Yorker is now back at the top of its game under David Remnick's editorship. Each issue offers commentaries and reporting on politics, culture, and events, with a focus that's both national and international; humor and cartoons; fiction and poetry; and reviews of books, movies, theater, music, art, and fashion. Several times a year special issues focus on a theme--music, fashion, business. The writing is mostly first-rate, frequently coming from top literary and journalistic talents. The New Yorker's weekly issues can seem overwhelming--so much good stuff to read, piling up so fast!--but it's as easy to dip in for a small snack as it is to wade in for a substantial meal. --Nicholas H. Allison

Product Description:
Week after week, The New Yorker keeps its reader current. Subscribe now and don't miss the New Yorker's famous fiction and poetry, book and film review, its incisive looks at politics, people and the way we live, and of course, those CARTOONS. In-depth reporting, surprising opinions, sharp wit, the best in prose, poetry, and the visual arts can all be yours for just $1 an issue!



Customer Reviews
Average Rating: out of 5 stars
Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - New Yorker Magazine renewal
I ordered a renewal of my subscription to this magazine, but your acknowledgements indicated a new subscription.I do not want two magazines delivered for the remainder of my original (as yet unexpired) subscription. Your software needs to be improved in this area.
Sincerely, Charles Chadbourn

Rating: 2 out of 5 stars - Not what it used to be
The writing, content, and cartoons have all gone downhill over the last decade. The New Yorker of 1999-2003 was essential reading -- engaging, thought-provoking, clever, wry. Today's New Yorker is tired. The cartoons, once clever and relevant, are now either obtuse or worn out (how many more "stressed out" montages by Roz Chast must I flip past?). For my money, I get broader and deeper political coverage in The Economist, more innovative writing and photos in The Paris Review, and sharper liberal ... Read More

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - all screwed up
I renewed through Amazon and understood that the magazine had record of it, but a current issue was delayed and I did not receive it just before leaving the country for two weeks.When I returned I discovered that the delay was due to the fact that a cover stating "Only One Month to Go" had been plastered over the magazine.When I called the magazine, they said the payment had been deleted.By this time the price I was paying Amazon was the same as that offered by The New Yorker, so next year I ... Read More

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - New Yorker Magazine Delivers
You simply cannot find a contemporary American magazine that delivers a better and more satisfying combination of political insight, current events, humor and arts. Despite its name, the magazine is not Manhattan-centered. Despite its image, it is not a stodgy relic from another generation but very current and very topical. Try it. Skip straight to Talk of the Town and you will be hooked.

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - would love to have it on Kindle
I love the New Yorker.The stories, poems, articles and especially the comics.It would be great if it were made available for the Amazon Kindle.I would definitely subscribe.

 
 
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