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The New Yorker (1-year)

The New Yorker (1-year)

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Publisher: Conde' Nast Publications
Category: Magazine

List Price: $196.18
Buy New: $39.95
You Save: $156.23 (80%)



Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 90 reviews
Sales Rank: 40

Format: Magazine Subscription, Print
Type: Consumer magazine
Subscription Issues: 47
Subscription Length: 12 Months
Issues Per Year: 47
First Issue Lead Time: 4-6 Weeks

ASIN: B00005N7T5

Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 4 to 6 weeks

Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 21-25 of 90
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5 out of 5 stars A Magaizine for Everyone   December 19, 2006
 8 out of 10 found this review helpful

One of the spotlight reviews referred to NY readers as a secret society or an elite. I'm sure this is tongue in cheek because the New Yorker really is a magazine for everyone to enjoy if they can get past its intimidating rep.

I got sucked into the New Yorker because I picked up a roommate's copy and to my surprise became absorbed by, of all things, a story about problems with mail delivery. i thought it would be boring (which was my perception about the magazine) but couldn't get over how interesting it was. I became a subscriber and have been (with a few interruptions) a faithful reader ever since. I always find interesting things to read and I've found the magazine to be a great guide to topics that I normally would not have been interested in and I am better informed because of it. The magazine is fearless in its reporting even if its stories challenge society's sacred cows. Elizabeth Kolbert's recent series on climate change is one example of the New Yorker's outstanding reporting.....it was the clincher for me in terms of understanding how overwhelming the evidence is for global warming and how imminent the threat is.

Since I cut my teeth on the New Yorker during the Tina Brown years I've always had a soft spot for that time in the magazine's history. I lived in a very small town at the time and I always found the magazine to be a great guide to a different world that was/is very hip, funny and smart. The actual pieces are still that way but I find some of the editorials somewhat knee-jerk albeit written in a very articulate way. I guess I'm the type of reader who likes to absorb information and come to my own conclusions about things and there is something a little musty about the mindset of the editorial writers....it just feels a bit ivory tower. However that is a very small complaint: for political reporting, sports, culture, world affairs, and the occasional slice of life quirky tale the New Yorker is a great passport to a fascinating world.



5 out of 5 stars Escape....   October 30, 2006
 6 out of 6 found this review helpful

I live in a small town full of rednecks-- this magazine helps me escape.


5 out of 5 stars Bread and Butter   October 12, 2006
 6 out of 6 found this review helpful

The new yorker was love at first site for me - I saw it on a friend's coffee table and I was drawn in intially by the photography and the intelligence of the writing. People always refer to the "Tina Brown ERA" as if it was a total disaster...but I disagree...perhaps because it coincided with my mid to late 20's, shortly after I first started subscribing to the magazine, when I needed culture as much as I needed knowlege. I thought TB added some sparkle to the nerdy publication - I loved the photo essays, and the women's profiles - I remember reading about Elizabeth Dole and Hilary Clinton, etc. Tina Brown got me hooked. David Remnick kept me going on a more nutritious and wordy diet. I do read it every week - skim, remove cards, read comics, check out the articles, go back to read the ones that are interesting. I have no idea why people would feel that they have to live in NYC to benefit.


5 out of 5 stars you don't have to be a New Yorker to love it, but it helps   October 12, 2006
 3 out of 3 found this review helpful

I was introduced to the New Yorker when I first arrived at grad school--and have been an avid fan ever since. You don't have to live in NY to love this magazine! Its articles, stories, cartoons, poems and commentary never fail to turn a cup of tea on an afternoon break into something more--like being invited to engage with the clever minds of our day. If you are no longer in school, staying well informed in this way is priceless. There are insights here that appeal to our need to be reading something with style so thoroughly that they make you wish your busier friends had enough time to discuss some of the controversial or witty contents with you. The cutting edge reporting is unparallelled in "literary" magazines of this sort. I will never forget the provocative articles on low energy radiation and cancer that caused such a stir in the late 80's, when people began exposing themselves to computers on a regular basis. The New Yorker is a gem. Picking up a copy is like fine dining in an era of junk food. Treasure it.


5 out of 5 stars almost forgot to mention the cool covers   July 10, 2006
 65 out of 72 found this review helpful

The New Yorker is both a blessing and a curse for me. It's a great magazine, but sometimes I feel so compelled to keep up with my weekly New Yorkers that I find it feeling like a burden.

My brother has a system, he just shared it with me, I hope he doesn't mind me sharing with you. The day a new issue arrives, he immediately goes through page by page, removes the subscription cards and advertisements, reads the cartoons and asides ("constabulary notes from around the world," "Block that Metaphor"), scans the poems, and gets the lay of the land. He then goes back later with a map in mind of which articles need to be read, and can tackle them undistracted by the rest of the magazine. I don't know, he says it works for him, he never falls behind.

My grandfather read the New Yorker every week. He had a coffee table filled with the newspapers and magazines he subscribed to. He also drank tanqueray. He did not do Sudokus or listen to Gabby La La, but perhaps would have if born in a different era. He had big bookcases filled with wonderful books. Sometimes a visitor would marvel at how many books he owned, and ask "have you really read all these books?" He would answer, "no, not all." And after the visitor left, he would gently and with remarkable restraint, explain to us why the question asked reveals a lack of education and sophistication. "...any serious reader knows that nobody has read all the books in their collection"

In my review of Highlights Magazine (or as my daughter calls it, "Maz-a-Gine"), I called it the New Yorker of kids literature. So it is only fair for me to now pronounce the New Yorker to be the Highlights Magazine of adult lit. A little old-fashioned, snobby, a touch stale, but still the best there is. I didn't even mind it during the Tina Brown era, it lost a little of its uniqueness temporarily but was still a cut above the rest. I wouldn't mind if there was a little more variety in the poetry, less of the same types of dreary poems about growing older and having your lover die from the same dreary poets, more of an effort to discover new poets. I love the fiction issues when they attempt to showcase new writers.

I'd possibly get more out of it if I lived in New York. As it is, I'm mostly taunting myself by reading the "Goings on about town."

Lately I've been especially enjoying the political essays in "The Talk of the Town" by the likes of Hendrik Hertzberg, David Remnick, as well as the journalism of Seymour Hersh. This kind of reporting is more important than ever, important to be appearing in a mainstream, respected publication during a time when the executive branch is doing everything in its power to intimidate an already cowed media. Henrick Hertzburg's recent essay on the proposed flag burning amendment. I intuitively know what he is saying, intuitively believe it to be morally and philosophically correct, but can't articulate my thoughts with the elegance and clarity of Mr. Hertzburg. He concisely lays out not just how wrong the amendment is, but also how irrelevant the issue is in all but a symbolic, abstract dimension. He writes that Republic and Democrat supporters "do not seriously regard it is as a good let alone necessary idea," and sprinkles in the beautiful parenthetical "(intellectual corruption, like the venal variety is no stranger to either party, even if, in the present era, both varieties are more common among the Republicans.)" Good stuff, Papa would have appreciated it.

Buy it, subscribe, enjoy.


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