The Vanity Fair Diaries
Power, Wealth, Celebrity, and Dreams: My Years at the Magazine That Defined a Decade
ISBN10: 1250191254
ISBN13: 9781250191250
Trade Paperback
464 Pages
$22.99
CA$30.99
Tina Brown kept delicious daily diaries throughout her eight spectacular years as editor-in-chief of Vanity Fair. Today they provide an incendiary portrait of the flash and dash and power brokering of the Excessive Eighties in New York and Hollywood.
The Vanity Fair Diaries is the story of an Englishwoman barely out of her twenties who arrives in New York City with a dream. Summoned from London in hopes that she can save Condé Nast's troubled new flagship Vanity Fair, Tina Brown is immediately plunged into the maelstrom of the competitive New York media world and the backstabbing rivalries at the court of the planet's slickest, most glamour-focused magazine company. She survives the politics, the intrigue, and the attempts to derail her by a simple stratagem: succeeding. In the face of rampant skepticism, she triumphantly reinvents a failing magazine.
Here are the inside stories of Vanity Fair scoops and covers that sold millions—the Reagan kiss, the meltdown of Princess Diana's marriage to Prince Charles, the sensational Annie Leibovitz cover of a gloriously pregnant, naked Demi Moore. In the diary's cinematic pages, the drama, the comedy, and the struggle of running an "it" magazine come to life. Brown's Vanity Fair Diaries is also a woman's journey, of making a home in a new country and of the deep bonds with her husband, their prematurely born son, and their daughter.
Astute, open-hearted, often riotously funny, Tina Brown's The Vanity Fair Diaries is a compulsively fascinating and intimate chronicle of a woman's life in a glittering era.
Reviews
Praise for The Vanity Fair Diaries
“A revelation . . . Brown is a woman of wondrous drive and ambition, arcing through the world as if fired from a cannon . . . There’s swing in Brown’s voice and vinegar in her pen . . . For legacy-media freaks, The Vanity FairDiaries is a bound volume of crack.”—Jennifer Senior, The New York Times Book Review
“Brave, self-revealing real time-history . . . the kind of specific reporting that made Tina’s Vanity Fair so juicy . . . Journalists will feast on it, but so too will anyone interested in media—especially magazines and how they came and went. If you liked Tina Brown’s Vanity Fair in the ’80s, her diary pages will sweep you back and even if you could get a little fed up with Tina back then, you will miss her now.”—Terry McDonell, The New York Times Book Review
"Tina Brown is an even more accomplished writer than any us imagined . . . Nearly every sentence in these off-hours jottings is polished to such a high sheen . . . Brown does en exquisitely pointillist job of capturing this circus of an era."—Edward Kosner, The Wall Street Journal
“Her narrative is juicy in the mold less of a chophouse steak than of a summer peach: a little tart, a little sweet, mostly refreshing. It’s pretty irresistible . . . She has a novelist’s sense of pacing and a perverse genius for description . . . Her gift is to feel the big story emerging in the small, human detail.”—Nathan Heller, The New Yorker
"In a memoir about her tenure at the helm of Vanity Fair, the legendary editor deftly crystallizes moments in social history . . . Spectacular . . . Here not only is Brown's voice sensibility, but also her searching and candid self-assessment."—David Frum, The Atlantic