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The Vanity Fair Diaries: Power, Wealth, Celebrity, and Dreams: My Years at the Magazine That Defined a Decade Paperback – October 30, 2018

4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars 1,813 ratings

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Named one of the best books of 2017 by Time, People, The Guardian, Paste Magazine, & Vogue

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.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

“A zingy account of the glittery, shallow 1980s . . . Brown is a waspish, reliably slick writer―her witty skewerings are first-class.” The Times (London)

“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 Fair Diaries is a bound volume of crack.” ―Jennifer Senior, The New York Times Book Review

The Vanity Fair Diaries is the perfect stocking filler for any social x-ray who yearns to wallow in nostalgia. But even students of our own time will find the prescience of Brown’s observations a source of amusement. The decade’s greatest symbol, she observes, turned out to be not a person but a building: Trump Tower, ‘the very definition of ersatz with its fool’s gold façade, its flashy internal waterfall, its dodgy financing.” ―Fiammetta Rocco, The Economist

“One of the pleasures of
The Vanity Fair Diaries―Tina Brown’s wickedly sharp account of her years as editor of the magazine―is her writing, the way she captures people with a few slashes of the pen.” ―Tina Jordan, Entertainment Weekly

“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

“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

“Her eye gets its glinting acuity from her status as an outsider―‘a cultural misfit,’ an expat both repelled and entranced by hyperbolic America.”
―Peter Conrad, The Guardian

The Vanity Fair Diaries is a bound volume of crack. Brown may have been a complicated feminist figure. But she was also a trailblazer, willing to take risks and get battered and bruised in the arena.” ―Jennifer Senior, The New York Times (The Daily)

“In the now published diaries that she kept while editing
Vanity Fair, Brown serves up a banquet of insider dish even as she skewers the social scene with self-appraising grace.” The Daily Beast

“Media insiders will gobble up Brown’s real-time descriptions of how she built the controversial but wildly successful ‘high-low’ mix at
Vanity Fair . . . Her most intimate observations―about her marriage to fellow Brit editor Harry Evans; her concerns over their premature son, Georgie; the agony of watching talented young men die from AIDS―elevate these Diaries beyond a mere New Gilded Age chronicle. As a well-educated Englishwoman in New York, Brown shows a novelistic flair in her descriptions of people, especially those she encounters at endless dinner parties, among them Manhattan’s richest Trophy Wives. ―Jocelyn McClurg, USA Today

“Tina’s singular voice immediately swept me up into the intoxicating, pulse-pounding energy of New York media culture in the ‘80s―the glittering social landscape, the thrill of creative rebirth and the relentless quest for success . . . Her diaries form a riveting, at-times-prophetic portrait of the opulent decade that shaped our modern media, told through the eyes of a woman who entered this world as an outsider but nevertheless smashed through professional barriers left and right.”
―Bruna Papandrea, Shelf Awareness

“A dishy tell-all . . . Give! Us! The! Tea!”
Jezebel

“A mile a minute memoir I read like a parrot with my nails embedded in Pirate Tina’s shoulder- yelling ‘what??!!’ ‘What!?!! WOWZA!’ as she swashbuckles through the eighties, her sword slicing up the staid shibboleths of NY society. I remembered why I was afraid of her in those days. And why that energy & imagination, turned to making the world better, has galvanized so many of us now. A cultural catalyst- she makes things happen. Thank god she wrote it all down. Hang on. A wild ride.”
―Meryl Streep

“Full of creative glee, passion and excitement,
The Vanity Fair Diaries features a cast of characters like Mad Men (and women) on speed; an epic of a legendary magazine’s dazzling re-creation; moments of laugh-out-loud comic asides, juicy gossip and sketches of Austen-like sharpness, all put together by an editor of high octane genius who pauses only to reflect that however good she might be, it’s never quite good enough. Oh yes, it is. Read the diaries and feel better about everything. The word lives!” ―Simon Schama

“High, low, smart, sexy, Tina Brown’s
The Vanity Fair Diaries is like the magazine she re-invented, a must read for anyone interested in Hollywood, high-society, and the movers and shakers of pop culture.” ―Anderson Cooper

“It’s a brilliant, concretely realized social history as much as a fabulous odyssey and I read it in a mad frenzy.”
―Stephen Fry

About the Author

TINA BROWN is an award-winning writer and editor and founder of the Women in the World Summit. Between 1979 and 2001 she was the editor of Tatler, Vanity Fair, and The New Yorker. Her 2007 biography of the Princess of Wales, The Diana Chronicles, topped the New York Times bestseller list. In 2008 she founded The Daily Beast, which won the Webby Award for Best News Site in 2012 and 2013. Queen Elizabeth honored her in 2000 as a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) for her services to overseas journalism, and in 2007 she was inducted into the U.S. Magazine Editors’ Hall of Fame. She founded the Women in the World Summit in 2010 and launched Tina Brown Live Media in 2014 to expand Women in the World internationally. She is married to the editor, publisher, and historian Sir Harold Evans and lives in New York City.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Picador; Reprint edition (October 30, 2018)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 464 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1250191254
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1250191250
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.01 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.15 x 0.8 x 9.15 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars 1,813 ratings

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Tina Brown
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TINA BROWN is an award-winning writer and editor and founder of the Women in the World Summit. Between 1979 and 2001 she was the editor of Tatler, Vanity Fair, and The New Yorker. Her 2007 biography of the Princess of Wales, The Diana Chronicles, topped the New York Times bestseller list. In 2008 she founded The Daily Beast. The Vanity Fair Diaries, her memoir covering the years she edited that magazine, was published in 2017. She lives in New York City.

Customer reviews

4.2 out of 5 stars
4.2 out of 5
1,813 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on April 13, 2022
I loved Vanity Fair Diaries from top to bottom. I was tentative as diaries can be dull. Although I could still recall seeing her on 60 minutes and thinking how wonderful she was, I bought the book hoping to get a little bit of insight about the magazine industry and Vanity Fair during its rebirth. Wow! So dazzled! Read it bit by bit, slowly, so dense with references to places, people and history (in politics, literature, film, fashion, true crime. . .) that I had to absorb it in sections. Love it, I will keep my copy. I have check marks all over of things and people I want to learn more about (and look up photos of) and lines that Ms. Brown has written that are keepers. She is so smart and ambitious and honest about when things aren't quite going the way she wants but she isn't sure what to do. . . Yet she is an amazingly accomplished woman and I really got a sense for how she organizes her team and makes everything come together for every issue. I hope she writes another book.
12 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on November 24, 2017
Reading Tina Brown’s memoir, THE VANITY FAIR DIARIES: 1983-1992 is like opening the diary of the mean girl. You know the one. She is pretty, smart and clever enough to be the gossip girl, instead she stored up all her snarky bits into a diary and saved them for this I’m going to get you now tell-all. Brown is clearly not afraid to make an enemy. And, you thought Ms. Wintour was icy. Just wait. She barely has a kind word to say about anyone. Every high roller in the world of media, literature, and finance does not go untouched by her scathing words. She picks apart appearances, talent, and relationships and if you stepped on her toes at Tatler or Vanity Fair, look out.  

What her diaries do reveal are her ambition, ability to forecast trends in the publishing industry, and her hard work. If you love Vanity Fair, well then, we owe her a debt of gratitude for revamping it.

We get glimpses of Brown’s ‘softer’ side when she shares her early woes of getting started in a male-dominated business as a young woman, living in a new country, managing a long-distance relationship with her husband, her desire for a family, and later her angst about not spending enough time with her newborn baby.

Don’t get me wrong, while Ms. Brown’s diaries are filled with her thoughts that would never have graced the pages of the magazines she edited, she certainly shares some outrageous one-liners from people she’s met. One of my favorites was from the CEO of Simon & Schuster’s secretary to an agent: “Mr. Snyder doesn’t wish you bad. And he doesn’t wish you good. He just wishes you wouldn’t call him no more.” Classic. And there are so many more like it, which make the book so worth reading.  
 
6 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on December 27, 2017
Maybe you had to live through the 80s to love this dishy account of the high-end NYC publishing/finance/celebrity world of that era, but I did live through the 80s, and I loved this book. Tina Brown is a great writer as well as a brilliant editor; the character portraits are deft and, in many instances, devastating. She certainly has the last laugh on -- or stuck the final blade in- Jackie O, who did Tina in at a dinner party in return for an unflattering VF piece. She has humanized Norman Mailer, whom I've always considered a sexist blowhard.

Even more interesting is her take-down of the mighty Hollywood producers and agents, New York financiers and publishing moguls who ruled in the 80s, and whose professional descendants rule now. Even those among us peasants who wish to be rich may be repelled and appalled at the mendacity, venality and ruthless self-interest of these masters of the NYC/LA universe. I would certainly not want to be married to one (neither would Tina; she is happily married to Harry Evans, now 89, a Brit who was offed by Murdoch and rebuilt a career in NYC). Her struggles with her boss, Si Newhouse, are fascinating. Tina Brown may have been a brilliant editor but, like so many employees, she was at the mercy of a ruthless, often unpredictable boss.

Brown's account of the AIDS epidemic, which tragically killed so many talented people, and her struggle to maintain a balance between her personal and professional lives, will resonate with women who have faced the same choices. We may not be editors of VF, but we still have kids at home who clamor for attention and bosses who demand 100%. I enjoyed Tina's portrait of her parents, too.

In short, although as a "survivor" of the 80s I may be biased, I thought this book a great read. Harry and Brando in the hot tub -- did he really have to go that far to obtain a book contract? I guess so. Good work, Tina.
6 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

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Flavia Gal
5.0 out of 5 stars All that glitters!
Reviewed in Brazil on May 4, 2022
Li primeiramente no Kindle e agora consegui um exemplar físico; adoro o estilo da Tina Brown de escrever e é interessante acompanhar os anos de sua vida profissional (transformando uma revista recém relançada mas estagnada em um ícone ditorial da década de 80) e pessoal (marido e filhos sendo a editora mais poderosa de NY). Se você gosta da combinação anos 80 + Manhattan + fama/sociedade, é um prato cheio. Eu adoro!
One person found this helpful
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D.R.
5.0 out of 5 stars Tina Brown: einfach klasse.
Reviewed in Germany on August 7, 2022
Insbesondere, wenn man schon damals die Vanity Fair gelesen hat. Hier dazu die Hintergründe zu den Stories.
W. A. D.
5.0 out of 5 stars Astonishing!
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on April 16, 2022
What a brilliant writer. This sophisticated story is a classic of the genre. Brown’s insights are sharp and always fascination. The world in which she worked may be glamorous but it’s somewhat terrifying too. The book’s an extraordinary read in every possible way. My only caveat is what the author “innocently” reveals about her personal ruthlessness - colleague’s are dished, friends “ridiculed”, staff sacked, and nannies too, at such a speed one wonders about Miss Brown’s judgment and personality. The devil might not wear Prada but he sure has an unattractive viciousness. When one realises how totally unimportant Vanity Fair and such other publications really are, and the superficiality of what they celebrate, you have to see the irony over all the misery surrounding their creation. Tina Brown’s world seems such a sad, silly and pretentiously absurd place, I thank the Lord that I’m not part of it.
One person found this helpful
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Laird Saunderson
5.0 out of 5 stars Loved this book
Reviewed in Canada on December 18, 2017
Loved this book ..ah the intricacies of who you know, how photographers spar for assignments, it's like
a gossip diary ..and such a feat to pull it off with publishers and competition ..and living in New York ..while
trying to be a Mother at the same time ..I loved it ..a fascinating read ..not for everyone though.
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OG
5.0 out of 5 stars Muy interesante!
Reviewed in Spain on September 25, 2018
Para los amantes de Vanity Fair, y también para los interesados en el trabajo de un editor, en la creación de una revista de éxito, en Nueva York, en los años 80...