or
Sign in to turn on 1-Click ordering.
Sorry, this item is not available in
Image not available for
Color:
Image not available

To view this video download Flash Player

 

GQ (1-year auto-renewal)

3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (98 customer reviews)

Cover Price: $47.88
Price: $19.99 ($1.67/issue) & shipping is always free.
You Save: $27.89 (58%)
Issues: 12 issues / 12 months
o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o

Subscription Options

Price
1 year (12 issues) $19.99 ($1.67/issue)
1 year auto-renewal $19.99 ($1.67/issue)
2 years (24 issues) $29.99 ($1.25/issue)
Already a subscriber? Use the same name and address as your current subscription and it will be extended by 12 issues.
At the end of your term, you will be automatically renewed for one year at the lowest renewal rate available on Amazon, which may be different than your introductory rate. Cancel anytime with Amazon's Magazine Subscription Manager, where you can also change your address, confirm first issue delivery estimates, and more.
Includes Apps
Digital App Benefits
Print subscribers now receive access to the Kindle Fire and iPad editions. To access, download the free app on your device and follow the instructions for current subscribers. Please allow 3 days for your order to be placed. See all magazines that include digital access.

Frequently Bought Together

GQ (1-year auto-renewal) + Esquire (1-year auto-renewal) + Details (1-year auto-renewal)
Price for all three: $37.99

Some of these items ship sooner than the others.

Buy the selected items together


Product Description

Amazon.com Review

Men enjoy reading about the best styles and hottest up-and-coming trends, so you'll love delving into GQ magazine to get your fix. Each issue provides something for every man, from sports to photos of models, so you can enjoy reading all about the current world.

GQ magazine offers tips on fine food and drinks, so you can show off your knowledge the next time you head out to a restaurant or bar with a date, and the advice on fashion and grooming will have you looking good. With columns dedicated to answering questions about sex, style, and more, you'll be ahead of the game in the world of romance.

If you enjoy sports, the revealing sports profiles are sure to be up your alley. The profiles of athletes give you insider information on the most popular players in sports today, so you can know everything about your favorites.

With information on current events and politics, GQ magazine also gives you up-to-date knowledge on the world. From the Presidential decisions to local government, the interesting articles are sure to give you a heads-up for the trends in current policies.

Whether you're headed out on the town for a date or just want some light reading, GQ magazine provides information about everything a guy like you wants to know. With photos of models, profiles on famous sports athletes, style advice, and more, this GQ magazine keeps you current, so you can feel secure and educated in any situation.

Product Description

GQ helps you look sharp and live smart. Each issue brings you revealing sports profiles, intimate photos of today's hottest up & coming actresses and models, tips on fine food & drink, sex, politics, fashion and grooming advice, The Style Guy's answers to your questions and so much more!

Important Information

Privacy & Security
In order to complete your transaction, we will share the name, billing and shipping address and other order information associated with your purchase with the publisher or magazine vendor. We will not share your credit card or email information with them. See Details.

Auto-Renewal
  • This subscription will automatically renew until you decide to cancel, at any time, using Magazine Subscription Manager.
  • We'll renew on your behalf at the lowest price available on Amazon.com at the time of renewal.
  • Each renewal term will be the same length as your original subscription, unless otherwise posted.
  • You can turn auto-renewal off or on in Magazine Subscription Manager.
  • Before your subscription expires, we'll notify you that your subscription will renew and you may change your credit card or address information or cancel before the order is placed.

Learn more about auto-renewal subscriptions on Amazon.com


Product Details

  • Format: Magazine
  • Shipping: Currently, item can be shipped only within the U.S.
  • Publisher: Conde Nast Publications
  • ASIN: B001U5SPI8
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (98 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #78 in Magazines (See Top 100 in Magazines)
  • This magazine subscription is provided by Conde Nast Publications
    Would you like to give feedback on images?


Customer Reviews

If you want liberal politics, or "skin" photos, you have far better magazine choices. Don Graeter  |  6 reviewers made a similar statement
And next year I'll just renew it again! roxy  |  2 reviewers made a similar statement
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
215 of 263 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Losing the right to the word 'Gentlemen' June 30, 2003
Subscription Term Name:1 year
I started reading GQ back in the mid-1980s. I was an undergraduate male, intent upon a political career in London. Thus, I felt GQ was a useful magazine to keep me up-to-date on the latest styles of dress, in addition to the occasional useful article on other topics of fashion, some sports, some travel, some pop culture -- after all, I was trying to be a 'happening' guy, and my social class and schooling (all conservative to the extreme, which in the big 80's was not out of place, but not cutting edge either) didn't give me all I needed to know.

Since those days (and since radical shifts in the direction of my vocation), I have used GQ less and less. Then, about a year ago, I got one of those buy-magazines-and-win-millions offers (no, I didn't win), and one of the few magazines that held any interest to me in this particular list was GQ. So, I thought, a few dollars, and I'll get a magazine I like.

Well, not quite.

GQ is very different today than I remembered. For one thing, only one of the past many issues I've received has seemed something I would want arriving at my home (as I am now a priestly sort) -- apparently, in order to stand out in the men's magazine world, GQ feels it necessary to put an almost-naked woman on ever cover in some sultry pose. Now, fair enough, this is appealing to men, but an examination of issues ten years ago will show this was not the cover feature back then (usually it was a man on the cover, either a well-known person from sports or entertainment, or someone showing a fashion style). The April 2000 issue is more what I was used to -- it has on the cover Nomar Garciaparra, Alex Rodriguez, and Derek Jeter. Of course, the headline has to appeal to the prurient interest, reading that they play shortstop as well as play the field....

This is certainly not the magazine I remember. I don't remember being titillated by GQ of the 80s (sure, there were advertisements that are always destined to have some sexual content, subtle and not-so-subtle), but GQ today is trying hard to compete with the almost (or maybe not almost) soft-core magazines such as Maxim. But I have found that I find very little of interest to actually read in GQ, and I am not so interested in the fashions or the sexual content any longer, so, I have come to the decision that GQ is no longer a magazine for me. And there seems to have been an explosion of advertisements -- so many, in fact, that it is hard to find the actual content of the magazine apart from the advertisements. Considering the number of advertisements (which, I must confess, all seem the same to me, and I'm an old PR guy, who used to teach advertising!), GQ should be paying me to look at the magazine!

And, I'm sure, GQ doesn't expect it to be. While in many demographic respects I am exactly who they are targeting (a 30-something, white, educated male), it no longer fits my lifestyle, which has taken a different direction from 'popular' culture. GQ has a strong audience, but alas, it is no longer the magazine for me.

Pass me 'The Economist', will you? Read more ›

Was this review helpful to you?
39 of 46 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Postives Far Outweigh Negatives November 7, 2001
By D
Subscription Term Name:1 year
GQ presents a difficult paradox of a magazine. There are many reasons to dislike GQ: Its pretentiousness, the focus on unobtainable clothing, the holier-than-thou writing.

But, there are so many positives about GQ that a subscription is not only recommended, it is almost required. First, and perhaps foremost, Alan Richman's food/restaurant columns. Second, Peter Bart (the once-deposed editor of Variety) writes a great Hollywood column. Third, GQ is far and away superior to its rivals, which I believe are Esquire and, somewhat surprisingly, Vanity Fair.

Fourth, the fashion features and celebrity interviews are beyond compare. Finally, GQ generally has one article a month that I would describe as investigative journalism, and these articles can't be missed.

All in all, GQ is an essential for any magazine rack.

Comment | 
Was this review helpful to you?
114 of 142 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars Recent changes have ruined a once great men's magazine January 1, 2004
Subscription Term Name:1 year
I've been a GQ subscriber for over 20 years but recently dropped my subscription. This is no longer the great men's magazine it once was. The features have dwindled in substance in favor of pictures and been overwhelmed by exploding ad content, making the "meat" minimal and very difficult to find.

Space which used to be devoted to interesting fashion, travel, "mixology" and dining has been diverted to titillating "skin" shots and silly lists of things which are uninteresting, useless and often offensive. What little fashion remains will be useless to those who inhabit even a semi-traditional world, though if your taste runs to 4 day beards, long uncombed hair and leather, you'll love it.

Also permeating the "new" magazine is a very heavy handed political agenda. The old GQ profiled politicians on occasion but with a focus on their personal side and without political "spin" to the story. Every issue of the new GQ trashes conservatives and Republicans from cover to cover. Examples---the current issue somehow finds a way to take a swipe at President Bush under the pretext of answering a reader question about loafers; a profile of singer Toby Keith is sneeringly derisive of his pro-U.S. songs; a recent review of several new British mystery writers found a way to spend much of its space trashing Margaret Thatcher, etc., etc.

So, the old GQ wasn't political and did a great job focusing on a broad range of fashion and other items of interest to guys with an emphasis on the traditional. It was interesting, entertaining and informative. The new GQ seems to me to have minimal use for anyone, even big city "hipsters" on whom the publishers have decided to focus. If you want liberal politics, or "skin" photos, you have far better magazine choices.... Read more ›

Was this review helpful to you?
15 of 17 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars GQ stands for....? July 24, 2006
Subscription Term Name:1 year
I never bought GQ back in my 20s because for one thing, I never thought of myself as a clothes-horse. Also, I actually took the G in GQ to mean that it was actually for Gentlemen, ie, sipping Champagne on a Yacht pass me the the Caviar type Gentlemen.

Well, after now having reached a "certain age" I find myself going back and forth between Esquire and GQ and find that in many cases, neither are exactly right for me. However, I think I've bought my last episode of GQ. The 2006 "interview" with Will Ferrel was interesting for the first three paragraphs, and then it became an excercise in self referentialism, disguised as an attempt at wit.

Also, the Political views of the editors of the magazine are omnipresent, which would be OK except for the fact that I'm not reading GQ for Political content. There are plenty of magazines out there make this their specialty, and when I find it in GQ, its just tiresome. Frequently, swipes at politicians just come out of nowhere in an article, as if the Editor decided that a jab at whomever he didn't like might help the piece, regardless of its content.

Not to mention - does anyone actually wear the clothing they put on display? $800 tennis shoes? I fear that I will be an Esquire reader - I can't bear to become a "Men's Best Life" subscriber just yet.
Comment | 
Was this review helpful to you?
Most Recent Customer Reviews
4.0 out of 5 stars Visually appealing
GQ is mostly just good for its pictures and advertisements, which definitely provide a lot of value. Read more
Published 18 days ago by Justin B.
1.0 out of 5 stars Utterly juvenile
I subscribe off-and-on to a variety of magazines to expand my horizons from Men's Health to Cosmo to Maxim to whatever. Read more
Published 23 days ago by Bud
4.0 out of 5 stars gifted it
i gifted this to my grandson aho is 26 and out in the business world. It keeps him apprised of whats out there
Published 28 days ago by June Kupper
5.0 out of 5 stars Gentlemans Quarterly is still the best
I was first exposed to GQ while in the Navy. I was stationed in Pearl Harbor, so fashion was very important. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Jesus P. Magallon
4.0 out of 5 stars Teaches you fashion.
An insiders inside scoop, on what not to wear.health,life and what a woman wants her man to be.BUY htis mag!
Published 1 month ago by terry wilson
5.0 out of 5 stars Photographer staying in tune w/ Men's Fashion
My male models/subjects often ask for my opinion on what they should wear. Granted that they don't have much of a collection, but just incase that they do, I want to be sure I'm in... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Cathy P. Nguyen
5.0 out of 5 stars My wife likes it too.
I like the articles and the fragrance samples. Some of the clothes are too far out for me. Thank you.
Published 1 month ago by V
5.0 out of 5 stars Expected
I've enjoyed this magazine for decades. It is not just helpful for fashion, but also has great articles, and great style tips.
Published 2 months ago by Coston Dorsey
2.0 out of 5 stars A mediocre magazine, scrambling to compete with...
ESQUIRE.

Ordinary content about ordinary people. Esquire often shocks and surprises its readers (like the expose' on AWOL soldiers where they interviewed one, and he... Read more
Published 2 months ago by Dan Seidman
1.0 out of 5 stars Won't sync across ipad iPhone or kindle fire
Don't expect Conde Nast applications to synchronize across your various tablets or phones you are lucky if you can sign in , I have a kindle fire, iPad and iPhone and its only... Read more
Published 4 months ago by Gareth
Search Customer Reviews
Only search this product's reviews

Forums

Topic From this Discussion
change shipping address
how do i change shipping adress
Oct 3, 2007 by Spiro Galanis |  See all 7 posts
Have something you'd like to share about this product?
Start a new discussion
Topic:
First post:
Prompts for sign-in
 


Search Customer Discussions
Search all Amazon discussions


So You'd Like to...



Look for Similar Items by Category


Want to discover more products? You may find many from mens magazines shopping guide.