ESQUIRE November 1982 John Sayles David and 50 similar items
ESQUIRE November 1982 John Sayles David Geffen Van Gordon Sauter Jane Martin
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View full item details »
Shipping options
Seller handling time is 1 business day Details
$5.00 to United States
Offer policy
OBO - Seller accepts offers on this item.
Details
Return policy
Refunds available: See booth/item description for details
Purchase protection
Payment options
PayPal accepted
PayPal Credit accepted
Venmo accepted
PayPal, MasterCard, Visa, Discover, and American Express accepted
Maestro accepted
Amazon Pay accepted
Nuvei accepted
Item traits
Category: | |
---|---|
Quantity Available: |
Only one in stock, order soon |
Condition: |
Very Good |
Publication Year: |
19820000 |
Publication Name: |
Esquire |
Topic: |
Men's Interest |
Publication Frequency: |
Monthly |
Publication Month: |
November |
Listing details
Seller policies: | |
---|---|
Shipping discount: |
Items after first shipped at flat $1.00 | Free shipping on orders over $40.00 |
Posted for sale: |
More than a week ago |
Item number: |
1534410212 |
Item description
Esquire
"The Magazine for Men" --
Including all the great writers, illustrators, pictorials, vintage advertisements, fashion and more -- Exclusive MORE MAGAZINES detailed content description, below!
Issue Date:
NOVEMBER 1982; Volume 98, No. 5
IN THIS ISSUE:-
This description copyright MOREMAGAZINES. Any unauthorized use is strictly prohibited. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18
COVER: FATHER LOVE, by Anthony Brandt.
The Profound pain and exquisite joy a man feels for his children are unlike any other emotions he will ever have.
Cover Photograph: Jean Salade.
FEATURES:
DOCUMENTARY: THE MAN WHO MARRIED DAN RATHER, by Ron Rosenbaum. As the new president of CBS News, Van Gordon
Sauter slapped CBS out of its post- Cronkite blues. Now Sauter Co. are pondering a change in the very conception of what
news is.
THE LITERARY LIFE: D. M. THOMAS's WAR AGAINST THE ORDINARY, by Lesley Hazleton. He sits in a buttoned-up town in
England and unleashes his imagination. Erotic imagery fuels the writing of the author of The White Hotel.
FIRST PERSON: BORDER LINES, by David Hellerstein. She existed, flawed and distorted with rage, on a thin line between sanity
and psychosis. As her psychiatrist, he briefly crossed his own professional line. Then they brushed past each other, going in
opposite directions.
PROFILE: THIS GENERATION ISN'T LOST; IT'S LIVING IN HOBOKEN, by Randy Sue Coburn. JOHN SAYLES's screenplays contain
keen observations on his generation, probably because he borrows characters who traffic in his personal world. [Profile, with FULL PAGE photo. Seven full pages.]
ESSAY: FATHER LOVE, by Anthony Brandt. His standing as a father is shaky. He sometimes believes he's lost his children, even
when they're sitting close enough to touch. He hopes they understand that a man can stop loving his wife but never his
children.
ESQUIRE EYE: FACES OF CHARACTER, Photographs by David Bailey. Although you never seem to remember character actors'
names, you never forget them if they're doing their jobs right. We salute five of the best. With profiles and FULL page photos of: Kenneth McMillan, Lois Smith, Harry Dean Stanton, Robert Joy, and Josef Sommer.
IN QUOTES: DAVID GEFFEN TALKS A LITLLE, by Robert Sam Anson. The son of Russian immigrants, this entertainment
mogul grew up to the words: "You have only one life. You have to make of it whatever you want to be." He wanted to be
everything.
FASHION: TOP COATS, by Vincent Boucher. Don't let the elements get you down this winter. Wrap up in one of these overcoats,
raincoats, or parkas. Though the styles come from diverse countries, these coats share common threads: warm colors and
roomy comfort.
HUMOR: ITEMS FROM OUR CATALOG, by Alfred Gingold. Provides product listings for "aspiring outdoorsmen.
Lightweight, good for overland trips. For the adventuresome man who has every kind of gear imaginable and wants more.
FOOD: MY FAVORITE RESTAURANT, by Mimi Sheraton. It's a wonderful wreck of a restaurant on a backwater street in
Paris. It hides no tricks behind its faded curtains, simply the lusty genius of its eighty-two-year-old chef and owner.
MEN AND WOMEN: LOVE'S LABOR'S COST, by Jack McClintock. Herpes is our incurable virus of love, the dark underside of the
sexual revolution. It has spread so broadly across the population that it has changed the way people conduct their intimate
lives. Here is one man's story.
FICTION: THE REVELATIONS, by Jane Martin. In these monologues from Talking With, three women unveil themselves. Never is
an actress more vulnerable than when under the lights at center stage. Never is a woman more vulnerable than when she talks
about her past.
MAN AT HIS BEST:
Smart Money: Bordeaux by the Bottle; Practical Matters: How to Find Out How To; Classics: The Cardigan; The Seasoned Cook:
The Real Secret of Game Cookery; Special Places: Irresistible Mountain Lodges; First-Rate: No-Screen TV; Good Thinking: Notes on
Cool; The Drinking Man: The Neighborly Canadians; The Right Stuff: Just Our Type; The Enlightened Traveler: Learning at the
Source; What Every Man Should Know: How to Take it in Perks.
DEPARTMENTS:
BACKSTAGE WITH ESQUIRE: Men and Fatherhood.
THE SOUND AND THE FURY: Letters from Readers.
UNCONVENTIONAL WISDOM by Adam Smith: In Case of Cataclysm.
SPORTS CLINIC by Calvin Fussman: Protecting Your Privates.
ETHICS by Laurence Shames: Wolves Mate for Life.
AMERICAN BEAT by Bob Greene: Gangs of Princes.
HIGH LIFE by Taki: Why I Became a Journalist.
OUTDOORS by Geoffrey Norman: The Birth of a Park.
This description copyright MOREMAGAZINES. Any unauthorized use is strictly prohibited. 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31
Magazine is COMPLETE and in VERY GOOD + condition (see photo), Approx 8 1/2" X 11" Standard magazine Format. Vintage Esquire magazines are more and more sought after as time goes by, and they are getting more scarce on the market!
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