GQ (1-year) | 
| Publisher: Conde Nast Publications Category: Magazine
List Price: $59.88 Buy New: $12.00 as of 9/7/2010 16:22 CDT details You Save: $47.88 (80%)
Seller: Amazon.com Rating: 77 reviews Sales Rank: 15
Format: Magazine Subscription, Print Type: Consumer magazine Subscription Issues: 12 Subscription Length: 12 Months Issues Per Year: 12 First Issue Lead Time: 6-10 Weeks
ASIN: B00005N7QI
Shipping: Eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping Availability: Usually ships in 1 to 3 months
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Amazon.com Review The "GQ look" is synonymous with classic cool and sophistication, and despite a recent outburst of trendy magazines (think Maxim and FHM) vying for the attention of young professional males, the steeped-in-tradition monthly GQ carries on without missing a beat. Yes, there's more décolletage gracing the cover than there used to be, but GQ continues to supply enough cultural commentary, celebrity profiles, features, and style guides to keep the modern man in touch with what's going on in the world from month to month.GQ's ideal reader is probably one who actually might be able to afford any of the high-end suits, shoes, and watches featured among the countless ads packed between the covers. Though the average reader might enjoy scanning a fashion spread about steakhouses entitled "How to Dress for a Porterhouse" and reading articles like "50 Ways to Blow Your Bonus," it's unlikely that such folly holds much practical advice. Literary editor Walter Kirn keeps short fiction on display, and Alan Richman's writing on food and dining out is always entertaining, even when he comes across as borderline cranky. Two regular Q&A features, "The Style Guy" and "Dr. Sooth," run the gamut from when it's appropriate to wear a straw hat to problems in the bedroom. --Brad Thomas Parsons
Product Description GQ helps you look sharp and live smart. Each issue brings you revealing sports profiles, intimate photos of today's hottest up & coming actresses and models, tips on fine food & drink, sex, politics, fashion and grooming advice, The Style Guy's answers to your questions and so much more!
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 77
Postives Far Outweigh Negatives November 7, 2001 D (Metro Detroit, MI USA) 32 out of 38 found this review helpful
GQ presents a difficult paradox of a magazine. There are many reasons to dislike GQ: Its pretentiousness, the focus on unobtainable clothing, the holier-than-thou writing.But, there are so many positives about GQ that a subscription is not only recommended, it is almost required. First, and perhaps foremost, Alan Richman's food/restaurant columns. Second, Peter Bart (the once-deposed editor of Variety) writes a great Hollywood column. Third, GQ is far and away superior to its rivals, which I believe are Esquire and, somewhat surprisingly, Vanity Fair. Fourth, the fashion features and celebrity interviews are beyond compare. Finally, GQ generally has one article a month that I would describe as investigative journalism, and these articles can't be missed. All in all, GQ is an essential for any magazine rack.
Bring it on!! November 2, 2002 Patrick Graham (Gainsville, Fl United States) 8 out of 10 found this review helpful
Many people take one look at all of the fashion ads in GQ and assume that it is devoid of substance. This is not at all the case, in fact, it is full of substance.From the company that brings you Vanity Fair and Conde Nast Traveler, GQ has a long history of being the premier men's magazine. Whats more, they have faced a lot of competition in recent years with the explosion of other men's magazines like Maxim, FHM, and Stuff. But, GQ has separated itself from those publications and taken the high road. Each month you will find many great columns and features, among my personal favorite are: "the style guy, Dr. Sooth's advice for the horizontally challenged, and Manly Arts." In addition, you will find many fiction and non-fiction stories from America's top writers. This magazine is a great one to subscribe too. I look forward to it every month.
The gift of human speech. November 5, 2001 Alexander Suraev 7 out of 9 found this review helpful
I think a very few magazines can boast of getting better and better with the years. GQ is one of these exceptions. While most of the competitors insult you by presuming your attention span does not exceed 5-6 minutes the magazine presents you with the articles that are sometimes 6-7 pages long and very profound. It took Robert Draper 2 month to research the eunuch subculture in the modern USA (April 2000) but the resulting piece of journalism is unforgettable - just as the guy's feature on the once-famous bodybuilder, the reluctant muscle god Dave Draper. I still smile recalling some of Joe Queenan's Parisian pranks - the Froggies finally got their due. And the author puts something really funny in almost every issue. The sophisticated grumpiness of Alan Richman makes his every visit to a restaurant at home and abroad a real clash of the concepts how things should be and how they really are - these modes rarely meet in space and time but when it happens the gourmet is the first to heap the praise. And there are also The Style Guy, the monthly advice how to get rid of these annoying extra twenty grand - with a taste and style, Adam Sach's musings on the things that come his way and a lot more.Yeah, you get your hundreds pages of the latest fashion which is also a reason to buy the GQ but the glossiness can be found in many other places. The magazine talks to you in the voices of people you'd surely like to have as friends. There is no elitism, no showing off, no "entertaining" silliness. The authors' irony is endearing and mostly aimed at themselves. But do not get the impression it's small-scale. The magazine is very well-connected and you are guaranteed to get the interviews with and the profiles of all the celebrities you'd like to hear about. The persons which interest me no less are these common people you'll have no chance to meet reading the rest of the "men's magazines". The need to sell many sorts of fashionable merchandise and to form the yearning for a lot of expensive non-essential stuff is coped with somehow - the magazine had not lost the most precious gift - the gift of human speech.
Very Good February 27, 2002 James T. Sherman (San Francisco, CA USA) 5 out of 7 found this review helpful
A very classy Mens magazine. Maybe a tad snobish but being aimed more at the nomenklatura of society is much more a blessing than a curse. Much better than any of its competition.
GQ In A Nutshell June 7, 2005 Daniel E. Lamon (Nipomo, California United States) 7 out of 10 found this review helpful
GQ, A.K.A Gentlemen's Quarterly is a men's magazine like Cosmopolitan is to women. GQ has a broad range of contents in it's magazine from: in-depth articles from movie and rock stars, fashion, food and drink, technology, movies, music, etc. The magazine gives equal attention to all the contents except fashion which is more abundant throughout the magazines pages. All in all, GQ is a great men's magazine with plenty of fashion news/tips, and also delves in other men's interests as stated above.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 77
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