Books about Magazines and the People Who Make Them

Blitt
By Barry Blitt

Read it because: it’s like spending an entire day with this genius/nebbish artist. You’ll get all the laughs, all the fragility, and all the neuroticism.

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Art of The Times
By JC Suares

Read it because: it’s an amazing archive of the Times, before color. Also: Brad Holland.

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The Vanity Fair Diaries (1983–1992)
By Tina Brown

Read it because: the idea of spending a weekend curled up in your jammies with one of the most extraordinary editors of all time makes you feel all the things.

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Anna: The Biography
By Amy Odell

Read it because: you’re dying to know what’s going on behind those dark glasses.

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Art of McSweeney’s
By Dave Eggers

Read it because: whatever McSweeney’s is selling, you’re buying.

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Like a Rolling Stone
By Jann Wenner

Read it because: Jann was probably the guy who turned you on to magazines.

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Dilettante: True Tales of Excess, Triumph, and Disaster
By Dana Brown

Read it because: you loved Bright Lights, Big City, but you wanted a version set in your world.

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50 Years of Ms.
The Best of the Pathfinding Magazine That Ignited a Revolution
By Gloria Steinem

Read it because: you heard Gloria on the podcast and just want a few more minutes with her.

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The Accidental Life: An Editor’s Notes on Writing and Writers
By Terry McDonell

Read it because: because sitting down and doing the nitty gritty with your editor is one of the greatest things about making magazines.

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Sticky Fingers: The Life and Times of Jann Wenner and Rolling Stone Magazine
By Joe Hagan

Read it because: you read Jann’s version (see below) and felt like maybe there’s a little more to the story.

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Growing Up Underground: A Memoir of Counterculture New York
By Steven Heller

Read it because: Steve, a ubiquitous presence your whole career, was once arrested for being a pornographer.

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Not Pretty Enough: The Unlikely Triumph of Helen Gurley Brown
By Gerri Hirshey

Read it because: you had no idea that HGB grew up incredibly poor in the Ozarks, was anorexic before it was a thing, was cripplingly insecure, and was a card-carrying sexual dynamo, who changed women’s lives.

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The 10 Influential Creators for Magazine Design
By Yashushi Fujimoto

Read it because: the avant garde nature of the indie mags feature is now the norm.

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Object Lessons: Magazine
By Jeff Jarvis

Read it because: this is the BTS story of the launch of Entertainment Weekly you didn’t know you needed to read. Bonus: Jarvis tells us what went wrong with publishing.

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Citizen Newhouse: Portrait of a Media Merchant
By Carol Felsenthal

Read it because: what you thought you knew about Condé Nast’s excess doesn’t even scratch the surface. Also: Si takes an incredible beating here.

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100 Years of Magazine Covers
By Steve Taylor

Read it because: memories. And great design.

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