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:
March, 1982; Volume 97, No. 3
IN THIS ISSUE:-
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COVER: If you survive the coming nuclear War ... Don't worry, our leaders have a swell plan.
Cover Photograph, Joseph Coco/Construction, Timothy Eames.
DOCUMENTARY:
HOW WOULD THE U.S. SURVIVE A NUCLEAR WAR? by Ed Zuckerman. Don't worry if you're not ready to think about the unthinkable.
The government's got more than thirty agencies and departments working on postattack procedures right now Cash and opium have
been stockpiled, change-of-address cards have been sent to your local post office. Immediately after an attack, a General Freeze
Order will regulate prices and wages, and current taxes will be forgiven. Relocation and finding food and water may be tricky-- but
you just need to keep a good mental attitude.
QUARTER NOTES, THE ESQUIRE MUSIC REVIEW:
JAZZ: SHANNON JACKSON by Gary Giddins. He's a drummer with a penchant for swing, a composer of unmistakable originality.
THE JAZZ HIGH NOTES: Five Best
Recent Releases by Gary Giddins.
COUNTRY: HANK WILLIAMS, JR. by Michael Bane. When he sings "A Country Boy Can Survive," it's a personal as well as a political statement.
COUNTRY HIGH
NOTES: The Five Best Recent Releases by Roy Blount Jr.
ROCK: ARETHA FRANKLIN by Charlie Haas. The past eight or nine years of Franklin's career mirror the hectic disarray of soul itself. [With Two full page photos]
ROCK HIGH NOTES The Five
Best Recent Releases by Billy Altman.
CLASSICAL: YO-YO MA by Helen Epstein. At twenty-six, he's a virtuoso, the man Isaac Stern has called "the greatest cellist alive.".
CLASSICAL HIGH NOTES The
Five Best Recent Releases by Peter Andrews.
FEATURES:
PROFILE: THE BEST-KEPT SECRET IN AMERICAN JOURNALISM IS MURRAY KEMPTON by David Owen. He's the journalist's journalist, a model of style, moral sense, and
dedication to his craft.
ESQUIRE EYE: REPORTERS' SKETCHBOOK by Ava Plakins and Anne Ross Stockwell. What counts is speed, accuracy, and a sense of unfolding drama: drawings from the
portfolios of America's great news artists.
FASHION: SURPRISINGLY SNAPPY by Vincent Boucher. The traditional sport jacket gets a lift for spring from dapper new colors, stripes, and plaids. The effect is bold
but decidedly gentlemanly.
THE SPORTING LIFE: WALKING ON WATER by Frank Rose. Surfing never went away after the golden Sixties; it just got meaner and tougher. And now a new order of
suffer rides the southern California waves.
BRIEF ENCOUNTER: BARBARA CARRERA. She's a gorgeously sleek model- turned-actress who speaks five languages, but you'd be wrong to typecast her as just another
jet- set beauty. In fact, there's nothing typical whatsoever about Barbara Carrera. [TWO pages, PLUS -- FULL PAGE photo]
FICTION WATCHING TV WITH THE RED CHINESE by Luke Whisnant. In which our three heroes, eager and intrepid, venture headlong into the clutches of a baffling alien
culture.
MAN AT HIS BEST: A GENTLEMAN'S GUIDE TO QUALITY AND STYLE: Smart Money: The True Value of a Gun; First-Rate: Making a Minor Motion Picture; The Seasoned
Cook: Wok Wise; The Drinking Man: Taking It Neat; Classics: The Wing Collar; Special Places: Small Big-City Hotels; What Every Man Should Know: How to Buy a Good
Used Car.
DEPARTMENTS:
BACKSTAGE
WITH ESQUIRE:
A Change in Ethics.
AMERICAN BEAT
by Bob Greene.
King of the Wild Frontier.
SPORTS CLINIC
by David Abramson.
The Classical Athlete.
OUTDOORS
by Geoffrey Norman.
The Sporting Art of Tying Flies.
UNCONVENTIONAL
WISDOM by Adam Smith.
Why We Are Preyed Upon.
ETHICS
by Harry Stein.
Justice Between Friends.
HIGH LIFE
by Taki.
Choice Locations.
BOOKS
by James Wolcott.
Dissecting Our Decline.
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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!