Garden & Gun

Garden & Gun  
Language English
Edited by Sid Evans
Publication details
Publisher
Rebecca Darwin and Pierre Manigault (United States)
Frequency bimonthly
Indexing
ISSN 1938-4831
OCLC no. 141187719
Links

Garden & Gun is a magazine about the sporting culture, food, music, art, and travel of the Southern United States. It was created by Pierre Manigault and John Wilson in 2004 and launched in 2007 with publisher Rebecca Darwin (former publisher of The New Yorker and Mirabella) as part of the Evening Post Publishing Company.[1][2] The magazine won three ADDY Awards and eight Magazine Association of the Southeast GAMMA awards in its first year, while being named the nation’s second-hottest magazine launch in 2007 by MIN Magazine.[3]

After Evening Post Publishing decided at the end of 2008 to discontinue its funding of the magazine, it was purchased by Darwin and Evening Post board Chairman Pierre Manigault. Darwin became president of the new company.[4]

Garden & Gun is based in Charleston, South Carolina and covers “an adventure-bound, art-loving, skeet-shooting lifestyle”, as well as gardens, “Southern tradition” and land conservation.[1] The name Garden & Gun is an "inside reference to a popular 1970s Charleston disco called the Garden and Gun Club."[1] According to Rebecca Darwin, President and CEO of Garden & Gun, the title "is a metaphor for the South—its land, the people, their lifestyle, and their heritage.”[5]

Garden and Gun hosts an annual awards issue for "best of" made-in-the-South products and companies. It had one of cartoonist and novelist Doug Marlette's last written works before he died in a car crash.[6][7] Other writers for the magazine have included Pat Conroy, Roy Blount Jr., and Donna Tartt.[8] Sid Evans became the magazine's editor in 2007.[8] John Wilson was the magazine's founding Editor in Chief.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Miller, Lia (April 30, 2007). "Garden & Gun Magazine Has an Awkward Debut". The New York Times. Retrieved 2015-05-30.
  2. Haughney, Christine (September 2, 2012). "Garden & Gun Claws Its Way Back From the Brink (Print Headline: "A ‘Love Song to the South’ Claws Its Way Back From the Brink")". The New York Times. Retrieved September 2, 2012.
  3. "Green Olive Media: The Official Release Garden & Gun Transitions to New Ownership". Greenolivemedia.blogspot.com. 2009-03-26. Retrieved 2017-05-30.
  4. "About Us – Garden & Gun". Gardenandgun.com. Retrieved 2017-05-30.
  5. Garner, Dwight (August 23, 2007). "‘A Well-Turned Phrase in a Percy Novel Could Take Out an Entire Subdivision’". ArtsBeat - The New York Times blog. Retrieved September 3, 2012.
  6. 1 2 Eric Konigsberg (2007-12-27). "New York Heresy: Editor Heads South". The New York Times. Retrieved 2017-05-30.
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