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Vanity Fair

December 2021/January 2022
Magazine

From entertainment to world affairs, business to style, design to society, Vanity Fair is a cultural catalyst, inspiring and driving the national conversation. Now the magazine has redefined storytelling for the Digital Age, bringing its high-profile interviews, stunning photography, and thought-provoking features to your device in a whole new way.

Vanity Fair

Editor’s Letter • My high school American history teacher had two turns of phrase that have stuck with me for 30 years. First, she consistently referred to our textbook by its author’s last name, Garraty.

Contributors

THE TRIMMINGS • THE VANITY FAIR GIFT GUIDE

FOR THE IRON SCION • Do the holidays Succession-style, with prezzies delectable enough to coax a smile from a Roy

FOR THE SUN CHASER • These gifts pair best with pool views, Venetian accents, and Jane Day’s From Palm Beach to Shangri La: The Architecture of Marion Sims Wyeth, out from Rizzoli

FOR THE TRUE ACE • Take inspiration from King Richard(Warner Bros.)—starring Will Smith as Venus and Serena Williams’s father—with items that turn heads on and off the court

FOR THE FLAG FLYER • Luxuriate in the tones of Jasper Johns: Mind/Mirror, a two-part retrospective on view at the Whitney and Philadelphia Museum through February

FOR THE BLOOMING ROSE • Make this season a fuchsia-infused dreamscape—inspired by Young Thug’s new album, Punk—for the headliner on your list

LUCAS BRAVO • Looking for a French connection? Try Emily in Paris star

Rhyme and Reason

True PRÊT • Net-a-Porter president ALISON LOEHNIS gives a primer in posh pleasures—and while her favorite things may dazzle with sapphires and sequins, her Manolos are made for walking

Melting POINT

Through the LENS • In her new book, ANNIE LEIBOVITZ showcases five decades of singular fashion

Just for FLICKS • For the opening gala of the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures, stars galore celebrated at the new Renzo Piano–designed building, a Los Angeles destination 10 years in the making

The JUUL CASE • What we may have lost when the question of vaping got political

She Was WALKING HOME • The murder of Sarah Everard horrified a nation—and exposed deep rifts in feminist approaches to criminal justice

A HAPPY NEW YEAR • After a long break from the screen, Jennifer Lawrence returns with the ferocious comedy Don’t Look Up. The Oscar winner talks to V.F. about love, fame, and boundaries

QUEEN OF THE DESERT • THE ARAB WORLD ONCE STRUGGLED TO EMBRACE HER, BUT FIVE YEARS AFTER ZAHA HADID’S DEATH, SEVERAL OF HER EXTRAORDINARY BUILDINGS ARE BEING UNVEILED ACROSS THE MIDDLE EAST—AND HER LEGACY AS ONE OF THE 21ST CENTURY’S MOST INNOVATIVE ARCHITECTS ONLY GROWS

DOWN TO EARTH • JEFF BEZOS’S HANDPICKED SUCCESSOR AS CEO OF AMAZON IS IN MANY WAYS HIS ANTITHESIS: UNDERSTATED, MODEST, AND RELATIVELY UNKNOWN. BUT CAN ANDY JASSY MANAGE A $1.75 TRILLION COMPANY, ITS 1.4 MILLION EMPLOYEES, AND A SEEMINGLY INEVITABLE REGULATORY ONSLAUGHT, ALL WHILE MAINTAINING HIS NICE-GUY REPUTATION?

EYES ON THE PRIZE • America’s most famous public intellectual is also one of its most besieged. As a book version of the 1619 Project hits shelves and the right wing rails against teaching racial justice, NIKOLE HANNAH-JONES takes stock of the national legacy she is building

WHAT TO WEAR TO THE REVOLUTION • WITH HEADLINEGRABBING RUNWAY SHOWS AND SUBVERSIVE CELEBRITY PROJECTS, BALENCIAGA CREATIVE DIRECTOR DEMNA GVASALIAIS FASHION’S REIGNING RENEGADE

UP SHIP CREEK • WHEN A CARGO SHIP GOT STUCK IN THE SUEZ CANAL TO THE TUNE OF $10 BILLION LOST DAI LY IN GLOBAL TRADE, AN AMUSED PUBLIC GIGGLED—AND THEN OUR SUPPLY PAIN KICKED IN

Pair OF Aces • FOURTEEN YEARS AFTER THEIR HIT...


Expand title description text
Frequency: Monthly Pages: 164 Publisher: Conde Nast US Edition: December 2021/January 2022

OverDrive Magazine

  • Release date: November 30, 2021

Formats

OverDrive Magazine

Languages

English

From entertainment to world affairs, business to style, design to society, Vanity Fair is a cultural catalyst, inspiring and driving the national conversation. Now the magazine has redefined storytelling for the Digital Age, bringing its high-profile interviews, stunning photography, and thought-provoking features to your device in a whole new way.

Vanity Fair

Editor’s Letter • My high school American history teacher had two turns of phrase that have stuck with me for 30 years. First, she consistently referred to our textbook by its author’s last name, Garraty.

Contributors

THE TRIMMINGS • THE VANITY FAIR GIFT GUIDE

FOR THE IRON SCION • Do the holidays Succession-style, with prezzies delectable enough to coax a smile from a Roy

FOR THE SUN CHASER • These gifts pair best with pool views, Venetian accents, and Jane Day’s From Palm Beach to Shangri La: The Architecture of Marion Sims Wyeth, out from Rizzoli

FOR THE TRUE ACE • Take inspiration from King Richard(Warner Bros.)—starring Will Smith as Venus and Serena Williams’s father—with items that turn heads on and off the court

FOR THE FLAG FLYER • Luxuriate in the tones of Jasper Johns: Mind/Mirror, a two-part retrospective on view at the Whitney and Philadelphia Museum through February

FOR THE BLOOMING ROSE • Make this season a fuchsia-infused dreamscape—inspired by Young Thug’s new album, Punk—for the headliner on your list

LUCAS BRAVO • Looking for a French connection? Try Emily in Paris star

Rhyme and Reason

True PRÊT • Net-a-Porter president ALISON LOEHNIS gives a primer in posh pleasures—and while her favorite things may dazzle with sapphires and sequins, her Manolos are made for walking

Melting POINT

Through the LENS • In her new book, ANNIE LEIBOVITZ showcases five decades of singular fashion

Just for FLICKS • For the opening gala of the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures, stars galore celebrated at the new Renzo Piano–designed building, a Los Angeles destination 10 years in the making

The JUUL CASE • What we may have lost when the question of vaping got political

She Was WALKING HOME • The murder of Sarah Everard horrified a nation—and exposed deep rifts in feminist approaches to criminal justice

A HAPPY NEW YEAR • After a long break from the screen, Jennifer Lawrence returns with the ferocious comedy Don’t Look Up. The Oscar winner talks to V.F. about love, fame, and boundaries

QUEEN OF THE DESERT • THE ARAB WORLD ONCE STRUGGLED TO EMBRACE HER, BUT FIVE YEARS AFTER ZAHA HADID’S DEATH, SEVERAL OF HER EXTRAORDINARY BUILDINGS ARE BEING UNVEILED ACROSS THE MIDDLE EAST—AND HER LEGACY AS ONE OF THE 21ST CENTURY’S MOST INNOVATIVE ARCHITECTS ONLY GROWS

DOWN TO EARTH • JEFF BEZOS’S HANDPICKED SUCCESSOR AS CEO OF AMAZON IS IN MANY WAYS HIS ANTITHESIS: UNDERSTATED, MODEST, AND RELATIVELY UNKNOWN. BUT CAN ANDY JASSY MANAGE A $1.75 TRILLION COMPANY, ITS 1.4 MILLION EMPLOYEES, AND A SEEMINGLY INEVITABLE REGULATORY ONSLAUGHT, ALL WHILE MAINTAINING HIS NICE-GUY REPUTATION?

EYES ON THE PRIZE • America’s most famous public intellectual is also one of its most besieged. As a book version of the 1619 Project hits shelves and the right wing rails against teaching racial justice, NIKOLE HANNAH-JONES takes stock of the national legacy she is building

WHAT TO WEAR TO THE REVOLUTION • WITH HEADLINEGRABBING RUNWAY SHOWS AND SUBVERSIVE CELEBRITY PROJECTS, BALENCIAGA CREATIVE DIRECTOR DEMNA GVASALIAIS FASHION’S REIGNING RENEGADE

UP SHIP CREEK • WHEN A CARGO SHIP GOT STUCK IN THE SUEZ CANAL TO THE TUNE OF $10 BILLION LOST DAI LY IN GLOBAL TRADE, AN AMUSED PUBLIC GIGGLED—AND THEN OUR SUPPLY PAIN KICKED IN

Pair OF Aces • FOURTEEN YEARS AFTER THEIR HIT...


Expand title description text