Adam Moss Popular Books

Adam Moss Biography & Facts

Adam Moss is an American magazine and newspaper editor. From 2004 to 2019, he was the editor-in-chief of New York magazine. Under his editorship, New York was repeatedly recognized for excellence, notably winning Magazine of the Year in 2013, and General Excellence both in print and online in 2010. New York won more National Magazine Awards under his tenure than any other magazine overall. During this period, he oversaw the development and growth of New York’s website into one repeatedly recognized as among the industry's most innovative and successful, launching the standalone sites Vulture and the Cut, among others. In 2018 New York's senior art critic Jerry Saltz won the Pulitzer Prize for criticism. Career Before coming to New York, Moss worked at The New York Times, where he edited the New York Times Magazine and served as the paper's assistant managing editor for features, overseeing the Magazine, Book Review, Culture and Style sections. He brought to the Times a magazine sensibility. "Moss became a guru of this change – an anti-Times sort of figure in the middle of the Times. A magazine person at a newspaper, an openly gay person in a repressed atmosphere, a mild man among bullies and screamers," described media writer Michael Wolff in a 1999 profile of Moss in New York magazine. When Ad Age named him Editor of the Year in 2001, the writer Jon Fine called the Times Magazine "one of the best reads in the business. Mr. Moss smartly and subtly remade the title, from its photography to front of the book, all the while navigating the internal culture of the Times. Under his watch, it became a showcase for thoughtful, long-form journalism. Like few other magazines, it thrives a few steps to the side of celeb-saturated culture and a few steps beyond the typical political polarities.” Moss shifted the balance of writers from Times staffers to nonfiction writers experienced in magazine journalism. During his time there, the magazine included as regular contributors Michael Lewis, Andrew Sullivan, Michael Pollan, Lynn Hirschberg, Jennifer Egan, and Frank Rich, among others. In 2001, the writer Michael Finkel was discovered to have created composite characters for a story he had written on the African slave trade, a small scandal that was quickly eclipsed at The New York Times by the much larger one involving Jayson Blair. After the September 11 attacks, Moss and the Times Magazine created an issue of the magazine called "Remains of the Day" that was published online in its entirety that Friday, the first time the magazine published in digital form before print. Its 2001 story “One Awful Night in Thanh Phong” revealed former senator and one-time presidential candidate Bob Kerrey to have led a particularly brutal attack on a peasant village in Vietnam that one of his fellow team members described in terms that invoked some similarities to the My-Lai massacre. Mr. Kerrey disputed the characterization. The story was nominated that year for a Pulitzer Prize. In January 2019, Moss announced that he was stepping down and leaving the magazine. Previous jobs also included six years in various editorial capacities at Esquire magazine. Northwestern Journalism professor David Abrahmson credits Moss's work at Esquire in assigning a series of pieces on the business of entertainment with "having a serious effect on what we all regard as the normal content of the mainstream media today, with its unremitting emphasis on not only celebrity, but also the economics of the celebrity-driven industries." 7 Days Moss first came to media attention as the founder of 7 Days, a weekly news magazine covering New York City arts and culture. Founded in 1988, it went out of business during the publishing-business recession of 1990, the week before it won a National Magazine Award for General Excellence. A number of 7 Days writers and editors, including Moss, were hired by The New York Times. According to Wolff in his New York magazine profile: "It is hard to overstate what kind of magazine-world hero Moss became with 7 Days and its particular pop-culture idiom, and what kind of success failure can be." A 2003 profile of Moss in the Oberlin alumni magazine notes, "Concepts introduced by Moss in 7 Days would later insinuate themselves into The Times (take the wedding narratives in the Sunday Styles section; visceral stuff cleverly packaged)." New York In his first year at New York, Moss completed an extensive renovation of the weekly magazine emphasizing an enhanced commitment to covering cultural happenings in the city and beyond (in "The Culture Pages") and introducing the "Strategist" section, a fun and indispensable urban sourcebook. At the time, Moss told Women's Wear Daily, "A lot of what we're doing with all of this renovation is actually restoration. Going back to the vault in various places during various eras of the magazine and trying to...modernize it and make sense of our time." Moss has launched new columns (John Heilemann's "The Power Grid" and Rebecca Traister's "The Body Politic" among them), ushered in a new generation of writers and photographers, and increased the magazine's political and business coverage. Moss is widely credited with restoring the luster the magazine enjoyed during its early years under legendary founder Clay Felker. "New York gives you an opportunity to talk about pretty much anything, all funneled through a single topic that its readers are passionate about, which is New York," Moss told Crain's New York Business in 2007. "That's the formula Clay Felker invented, and it's a great one." Digital expansion In 2006 Moss oversaw a year-long relaunch of the magazine's flagship website, nymag.com, transforming it from a magazine companion site into a redesigned, up-to-the minute news and information site. Monthly unique users at the magazine’s websites—NYmag.com, Vulture.com, The Cut, Intelligencer, the Strategist, and Grub Street, have grown immensely since then, to a record 53 million in May 2018. Washington Post media critic Howard Kurtz noted in a 2009 profile, "Moss' signature accomplishment may be the development of a thriving Web site." In a tribute to the magazine's late owner Bruce Wasserstein, The New York Times media critic David Carr wrote, "Mr. Wasserstein gets credit for selecting Adam Moss, the former editor of The New York Times Magazine, who has demonstrated significant skills in putting the magazine and its Web site in the middle of the Manhattan conversation, but Mr. Wasserstein gets even more credit for staying out of the way and allowing Mr. Moss and his colleagues to do their jobs." Almost a year later, in another one of his Times columns, Carr remarked, "One of the charms of the publishing business is that a single person can have an outsize effect, and many would suggest that Mr. Moss, with his deft hand for provocative covers and smart assignments, is one of the best editors working in a hybrid age." Awards During his tenure New.... Discover the Adam Moss popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Adam Moss books.

Best Seller Adam Moss Books of 2024

  • Inheritance and Natural History synopsis, comments

    Inheritance and Natural History

    R. J. Berry

    Ever wondered why primroses have three sorts of flowers; or about pesticide resistance in rats and mice, mosquitoes and greenfly; antibiotic resistance in disease organisms – all a...

  • The Open Sea synopsis, comments

    The Open Sea

    Alister Hardy

    The New Naturalist editors believe this to be the greatest general work on the subject ever written. This edition is exclusive to newnaturalists.comProfessor Alistair Hardy is trul...

  • The Soil synopsis, comments

    The Soil

    B. N. K. Davis, N. Walker, D. F. Ball & Alastair Fitter

    The soil is one of the great unsung disappearing resources, with over 100m tonnes being destroyed every year. This edition is exclusive to newnaturalists.comThe soil is the work pl...

  • Birds and Men synopsis, comments

    Birds and Men

    E. M. Nicholson

    Revealing the impact of civilisation upon our bird life, with particular reference to the species that have come to rely largely on types of habitat greatly modified or actually fo...

  • Natural History in the Highlands and Islands synopsis, comments

    Natural History in the Highlands and Islands

    F. Fraser Darling

    The Highlands and Islands of Scotland are rugged moorland, alpine mountains and jagged coast with remarkable natural history. This edition is exclusive to newnaturalists.comThe Hig...

  • Plant Pests synopsis, comments

    Plant Pests

    David V. Alford

    Ever since man first cultivated plants and grew crops, insects, mites and other creatures have risen to prominence as pests, but it is only throughout the last two centuries that w...

  • Dragonflies synopsis, comments

    Dragonflies

    Philip Corbet & Stephen Brooks

    Dragonflies are among the most ancient of living creatures – few insect groups fascinate as much or are more immediately recognisable.In this seminal new work, Philip Corbet and St...

  • Ecology and Natural History synopsis, comments

    Ecology and Natural History

    David Wilkinson

    Ecology is the science of ecosystems, of habitats, of our world and its future. In the latest New Naturalist, ecologist David M. Wilkinson explains key ideas of this crucial branch...

  • The Folklore of Birds synopsis, comments

    The Folklore of Birds

    Edward A. Armstrong

    Tracing the magicoreligious beliefs surrounding birds as far back in time as is possible, to the cultures in which these beliefs arose. This edition is exclusive to newnaturalists....

  • Mountains and Moorlands synopsis, comments

    Mountains and Moorlands

    W. H. Pearsall

    An invaluable introduction to the upland regions of Britain – their structure, climate, vegetation and animal life, their present and past uses and the problems of their conservati...

  • Insect Natural History synopsis, comments

    Insect Natural History

    A. D. Imms

    Insect Natural History introduces the reader to some of the latest discoveries and ideas about British Insects.This volume deals with the natural history of British insects, and in...

  • Galloway and the Borders synopsis, comments

    Galloway and the Borders

    Derek Ratcliffe

    Another volume in the widelyread New Naturalist series, this book is an indepth study of the natural developments and history of Galloway and surrounding areas.Often overlooked due...

  • Bird Migration synopsis, comments

    Bird Migration

    Ian Newton

    The phenomenon of bird migration has fascinated people from time immemorial. The arrivals and departures of different species marked the seasons, heralding spring and autumn, and p...

  • Moths synopsis, comments

    Moths

    Mike Majerus

    Moths provides a comprehensive account of the diverse natural history of these fascinating and popular insects. This edition is exclusive to newnaturalists.comAnother volume in the...

  • The Natural History of Orkney synopsis, comments

    The Natural History of Orkney

    R. J. Berry

    This is the first survey of the islands' natural history, complete in one volume. Because Orkney is exceptional, it is vital reading for the serious naturalist, as well as for bein...

  • Seashore synopsis, comments

    Seashore

    Peter J. Hayward

    A comprehensive, authoritative account of the natural history of the seashore, from earliest times to the present day. This edition is exclusive to newnaturalists.comThe seashore, ...

  • Uplands and Birds synopsis, comments

    Uplands and Birds

    Ian Newton

    Ian Newton, author of Farming and Birds and Bird Migration returns to the New Naturalist series with a long awaited look at the uplands and its birds.The uplands of Britain are uni...

  • Lichens synopsis, comments

    Lichens

    Oliver Gilbert

    Lichens are fascinating and beautiful organisms able to colonise a vast range of habitats, including seemingly impossible places such as bare icy mountain tops and sunscorched coas...

  • Highbrow, Lowbrow, Brilliant, Despicable synopsis, comments

    Highbrow, Lowbrow, Brilliant, Despicable

    The Editors of New York Magazine

    New York, the city. New York, the magazine. A celebration.The great story of New York City in the past halfcentury has been its near collapse and miraculous rebirth. A battered tow...

  • Sea-Birds synopsis, comments

    Sea-Birds

    James Fisher & R. M. Lockley

    SeaBirds introduces us to the seabirds of the North Atlantic, an ocean in which about half the world seabird species have been seen at one time or another. This edition is exclusiv...

  • Partridges synopsis, comments

    Partridges

    G R (Dick) Potts

    Globally, there are at least 45 species of game bird that have the word partridge in their name, but in this book G. R. Potts devotes himself to the Grey, Redlegged and Chukar Part...

  • Insect Migration synopsis, comments

    Insect Migration

    C. B. Williams

    Highlighting the significance of the widespread distribution of the migratory habit throughout the insect world. This edition is exclusive to newnaturalists.comThis is a pioneer bo...

  • British Freshwater Fish synopsis, comments

    British Freshwater Fish

    P. S. Maitland & R. N. Campbell

    An indepth look at the fish that inhabit the fresh waters of Britain and Ireland. These include famous members of the salmon family, such as the Atlantic Salmon and the Brown Trout...

  • British Game synopsis, comments

    British Game

    Brian Vesey-Fitzgerald

    British Game ranges beyond the strict legal interpretation of game and is full of interesting details about the birds and beasts that should interest sportsmen. This edition is exc...

  • Ferns synopsis, comments

    Ferns

    Christopher N. Page

    Ferns gives the reader an introduction to the reasons for the variety of ferns in the British Isles, as well as the history of their development within this landscape and their use...

  • Finches synopsis, comments

    Finches

    Ian Newton

    This illustrated survey of finch behaviour is a thorough, nontechnical account of the habits of these birds throughout the world.Greenfinches nest in plantations, large shrubby gar...

  • The Natural History of Pollination synopsis, comments

    The Natural History of Pollination

    Michael Proctor, Peter Yeo & Andrew Lack

    This is a brand new, fully updated edition of the natural history classic first published in the New Naturalist series in 1973 as The Pollination of Flowers. This edition is exclus...

  • Grouse synopsis, comments

    Grouse

    Adam Watson & Robert Moss

    With less than twenty species worldwide and only four British and Irish species, the grouse is surprisingly wellknown. Its habitats are diverse and relatively remote – ranging from...

  • Terns synopsis, comments

    Terns

    David Cabot & Ian Nisbet

    This New Naturalist volume provides a muchanticipated overview of these fascinating birds – the first book on the natural history of British and Irish terns since 1934.Terns are sm...

  • Wild Flowers of Chalk and Limestone synopsis, comments

    Wild Flowers of Chalk and Limestone

    J. E. Lousley

    Wild Flowers of Chalk and Limestone will urge many to follow in the author’s footsteps in search of the rich flora which make our chalk downs and limestone cliffs so fascinating to...

  • Grasshoppers and Crickets synopsis, comments

    Grasshoppers and Crickets

    Ted Benton

    For the first time ever, a DVD featuring exclusive video and audio material accompanies the latest New Naturalist volume, a multimedia first for the series.Ted Benton offers a comp...

  • Bumblebees synopsis, comments

    Bumblebees

    John B. Free & C. G. Butler

    This group of relatively large, colourful and familiar insects are a very popular subject of study because their behaviour can be observed without the use of elaborate equipment. T...

  • Plant Galls synopsis, comments

    Plant Galls

    Margaret Redfern

    A muchneeded study on plant galls – growths on plants formed of plant tissue that are caused by other organisms.Most naturalists have come across oak apples, robin’s pincushions, m...

  • Loch Lomondside synopsis, comments

    Loch Lomondside

    John Mitchell

    Loch Lomondside is celebrated for its outstanding scenery. The area supports a rich tapestry of water and wild land, forest and woodland, farmland and settlement. This edition is e...

  • Climate and Weather synopsis, comments

    Climate and Weather

    John Kington

    Reviewing the history and causes of climatic change and evaluating regional models, this New Naturalist volume offers an important analysis of climatic variations.Much has happened...

  • Plant Disease synopsis, comments

    Plant Disease

    David Ingram & Noel Robertson

    Plant Disease covers all aspects of diseases of plants growing in the wild or likely to be encountered on cultivated plants in farm, forest and garden. This edition is exclusive to...

  • Ants synopsis, comments

    Ants

    M. V. Brian

    Ants should provide both the amateur naturalist and the professional zoologist with a valuable source of reference, and a fascinating account of the lives of an intriguing group of...

  • The Broads synopsis, comments

    The Broads

    E. A. Ellis

    The Broads discusses the history of the Broads, the people who come into contact with and influence these waterways, and what the future holds.The unique complex of eastern English...

  • British Birds of Prey synopsis, comments

    British Birds of Prey

    Leslie. H. Brown

    Leslie Brown's account of our 15 resident, 7 vagrant and 2 migrant species of eagles, falcons, hawks and vultures in Britain presents a great mass of scientific information about o...

  • Woodlands synopsis, comments

    Woodlands

    Oliver Rackham

    The 100th volume of the prestigious New Naturalist series, written by one of Britain's bestknown naturalists, explores the significance and history of woodlands on the British land...

  • Butterflies synopsis, comments

    Butterflies

    E. B. Ford

    A scientific study that keeps in mind the needs of butterfly collectors and of all those who love the country in the hope that it may increase their pleasure by widening the scope ...

  • Wild Orchids of Britain synopsis, comments

    Wild Orchids of Britain

    V. S. Summerhayes

    A treasure for all lovers of wild plants – Wild Orchids of Britain provides a detailed account of all our orchid species, varieties and hybrids, and has a useful key to identificat...

  • Climate and the British Scene synopsis, comments

    Climate and the British Scene

    Gordon Manley

    From Chaucer’s sweet April showers to the peasoupers of Sherlock Holmes the British scene cannot be contemplated without climate entering in. This edition is exclusive to newnatura...

  • The Sea Coast synopsis, comments

    The Sea Coast

    J. A. Steers

    The Sea Coast shows in a persuasive and compelling way the origin and evolution of cliffs, estuaries, sea marshes, sand dunes and the communities of plants and animals that they su...

  • The Encyclopedia of New York synopsis, comments

    The Encyclopedia of New York

    The Editors of New York Magazine

    The musthave guide to pop culture, history, and worldchanging ideas that started in New York City, from the magazine at the center of it all. Since its founding in 1624, New York C...