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We love magazines. Because we publish one, we don't get to spend a lot of time writing about our peers. But our passion for magazines runs as deep as it does for music, movies, and yes, even beer.
All of our Best of the Decade lists are subjective, of course, but this one may be more colored by our interests than any of the rest. Because at some level, magazines are impossible to separate from their subjects, and the subjects covered by the now-defunct alt-country music magazine No Depression interest us much more so than those covered by, say, the also impressive Car and Driver. But a great magazine also transcends its subject matter, and these are 20 that we can wholeheartedly recommend.
So what are your favorites?
20. Interview (1969-present)
It was a simple idea back in 1969, but one that has aged well—capturing interesting people in conversation. Every fantasy dinner party that we've imagined has in part been recreated by Andy Warhol's Interview. Josh Jackson
19. Vanity Fair (1913-present)
No other magazine covers both politics and fashion with a quality of writing or level of expertise as high as Vanity Fair. Kate Kiefer
18. The Word (2003-present)
We love iconic UK music magazines like Mojo and Uncut, but there's a cleverness and freshness to young upstart The Word that nudges it ahead of its established competitors in our esteem. Josh Jackson
17. National Geographic (1888-present)
First published in 1888, National Geographic is still deserves the lauds for its extensive articles about geography and culture, high standards in photojournalism, map supplements and, of course, that iconic yellow border. Kate Kiefer
16. Utne Reader (1984-present)
This was the first magazine subscription I bought with my own money back in high school, and its ability to cull the most unexpected, interesting and engaging takes on any topics it chooses hasn't waned since. Josh Jackson
15. Real Simple (2000-present)
This women’s-interest monthly is full of beautiful photos, inspiring features, recipes how-tos, lists and charts—all intended to help make your life easier, and presented with a subtle, clean design. Kate Kiefer
14. Mental Floss (2001-present)
Without becoming an outlandish tabloid on the newsstand, this witty magazine is full of headlines that read like fiction, but are 100% true. Mental Floss addresses the tid-bits that no one else seems to think about (like how do farmers produce 46 million turkeys for the one day of Thanksgiving?), and it aims to make you smarter, one bit of trivia at a time. Gage Henry
13. Jane (1997-2007)
This slightly irreverent magazine catered to hip, creative women with thoughtful cover features on celebrities like Kate Winslet and Drew Barrymore, clever anecdotes from the staff, realistic fashion and beauty coverage, and reviews of up-and-coming bands. Our flag flew at half-staff the day it closed its doors. Kate Kiefer
12. Dwell (2000-present)
This is not your mother's shelter magazine. Making modern design and architecture accessible, we salute Dwell for devoting an entire issue to homes under 1,000 square feet. Josh Jackson
11. No Depression (1995-2008)
Grant Alden and Peter Blackstock gave a name to and rose a banner for alt.country, music with its roots in what we used to just call country before it became all shiny and plastic. Readers like us could rally around old country radio refugees like Steve Earle and Emmylou Harris and discover a whole new generation of Americana. Josh Jackson

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I wish that Garden and Gun would have made the list! Another great Southern publication!
What - no Monocle? You guys missed a great one.
The late UK music magazine "Comes With a Smile" gets my vote as the Best Magazine of the decade. Hands down the best interviews of any music magazine.
My favorite magazine of the decade was Electronic Gaming Monthly, which unfortunately closed its door late last year. But no magazine came as close to great video game journalism and actually asking hard questions and great features articles as the fantastic EGM.
Uncut is pretty great, as is Mojo.
American Songwriter.
If Zine's counted - then Maximum Rock N Roll.
Gee, Josh, I guess neither you nor your editors learned the difference between its and it's in high school English class. I *know* those classes can be real snoozers, but it makes those of us who *do* know the difference want to drive needles into our eyes when reading this crap.
Not one magazine on food or travel. And 3 ostensibly from New York City?
I think not. Try again, only this time put your personal biases where the sun don't shine.
OK, with the exception of Oxford American.
Hey Josh, thanks for fixing those 'it's-es"! I'll be glad to get your check for providing editing services. Email me for my address.
Great list, definitely agree with Wired as your number 1. Only magazine I wish were represented here is Fast Company magazine - something I initially wrote off, but now is a must-read every month along with Wired for me.
Perhaps it's a targeted for a fairly specific audience, but I find many of the start-ups they examine to be fascinating and inspiring as a tech-junkie.
Good list. I would add Texas Monthly. Writing, design, photography, originality--it has it all.
It's a shame that No Depression folded.
Thanks for including No Depression on your list. We're honored to be considered in the company of the rest of these magazines.
The decade ain't over till December 31, 2010.
I liked "Tracks". When they folded, the rest of the subscription was thrown over to Paste. Good move!
Yessss, Wired is definitely the best magazine! Dwell was the other one I was hoping to be on here!
not bad but I'd suggest PRINT and THE WIRE. And also GOURMET. Vanity Fair makes me puke,
Do the decade pedants get on your nerves, too?
Did the 80's start in 1980, or 1981? Seriously, I get the whole "technical" argument, and I was even THAT GUY during the millennium switchover, but as a culture we start the decades at zero and go until 9. Get over it, goodness sake. You people ruin the comment section to ever "Best of..." list I've read this entire freaking year.
I need some savvy business advice. We own a retail travel agency and wish to reach an upscale readership to advertise a cruise in a magazine with the broadest appeal, read by the most sophisticated audience who can afford a fine cruise. As we have a very limited advertising budget but do want to reach this select readership, can you recommend a magazine or two to us to contact? Would appreciate the advice.
Daryle Prager (Mrs.), Prager Travel, 1108 Kane Concourse, Suite 309, Bay Harbor Islands, FL 33154 (305) 861-8610.
I love Bookmarks magazine - the only other one I read regularly (along with Paste of course!)