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Cookie (1-year)

Cookie (1-year)


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Publisher: Conde' Nast Publications

List Price: $42.00
Buy New: $15.00
You Save: $27.00 (64%)



Rating: 2.5 out of 5 stars 58 reviews
Sales Rank: 226

Format: Magazine Subscription, Print
Type: Consumer magazine
Subscription Issues: 10
Subscription Length: 12 Months
Issues Per Year: 10
First Issue Lead Time: 6-10 Weeks

ASIN: B0009WJ906

Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 1 to 3 months

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Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review

Who Reads Cookie?
The Cookie reader is a busy and discerning parent who is interested first and foremost in her family s well-being, but also in maintaining her sense of style and her interests in adult, pre-baby pursuits. The first lifestyle magazine for families, Cookie understands that parenting is a study in extremes equal parts unbridled joy and abject terror, exhilaration and exhaustion, unconditional love and moments of resentment. As the modern parents guide to travel, food, fashion, health, home, and more, Cookie breaks the mold. With a voice that s as candid as it is celebratory, its mission is to offer inspiration and information to a generation of moms and dads whose balancing acts between work and family is ever more challenging and in so doing, to give them enough confidence in their instincts (which can be hard to make out, amid the deafening chorus of parenting advice). Through a unique combination of reporting and first-person observation and a visual language that is whimsical yet sophisticated, Cookie reminds parents that taking care of themselves their relationships, their minds, and their bodies and being a good parent are by no means mutually exclusive.

What You Can Expect in Each Issue:
Regular Departments include:

  • Smart Cookie: The place for tips, tricks, and products that help readers save time, money, and space while doing it in style.
  • Dressing: The best of clothing and accessories for moms and kids.
  • Taking Care: Beauty tips for mom and health advice for the whole family.
  • Traveling: Road trips and city guides to make any destination family-friendly.
  • Eating: Recipes and strategies to help readers create easy, delicious, and healthful meals.
  • Celebrating: Kids' birthday-party ideas.
  • Nesting: The best stuff for the home and nursery, as well as storage and organization strategies.
  • Gearing Up: Road tests of baby gear and kids' toys.
  • Figuring it Out: Essays on subjects ranging from loss and nannies to how to deal with the grandparents and competitive mothering.
  • Reviews: The best of kids' books, TV, movies, music, games, toys, and DVDs.
  • Features: As a lifestyle magazine, Cookie covers many subjects in its well: home, food, fashion, beauty, travel, how other families live, relationships, health, books, and shopping. Cookie is especially proud of its packages, which include its Best of Family Travel; Underrated, Under-the-Radar Children's Books; Developmental Toys; and Home Storage.
Past Issues:

Contributors:
Cookie has purposefully sought out writers who do not usually cover the subject of parenting and family, but are best known for thoughtful prose on subjects ranging from politics to sex. Regular contributors include Eleanor Casey, Heidi Julavits, and Lori Leibovich. Cookie is also proud to have tastemakers in its corner like Veronica Webb, Mary Alice Stephenson, Helen Schifter, and Lucy Sykes. To round out the mix, Cookies has parenting experts who offer relief for the anxiety and questioning of parenthood.

Magazine Layout:
Breaking from the parenting category's familiar tropes, such as pastel colors and cutesy, childlike design elements, Cookie s pages combine clean, structural elements with traditional typographics and fresh motifs, with the express purpose of appealing to moms not kids. With a highly original mix of lifestyle, travel, fashion, and still-life photographic styles, the magazine offers a well-paced design experience that feels comfortable yet fresh. The logo, display type, and folios are custom fonts created by Cookie s art department. Unique type treatments on feature stories provide visual commentaries, complementing the mood of the editorial content. And hand-drawn illustrations infuse the pages with warmth and whimsy. The magazine s overall design delivers a healthy balance of white space on information-packed text and visuals, while bold colors and oversize numerals serve as clear, convenient navigational cues throughout.

Comparisons to Other Magazines:
Cookie has no direct competitors. Cookie is not a parenting magazine, although it addresses parenting issues and is targeted to moms. As a lifestyle magazine for parents, it alone populates its niche. The mom filter that Cookie applies to the subjects it covers (food, fashion, travel, home, health, and relationships) speaks to the woman within the mother, and makes her feel chic, in-the-know, and part of a community of caring, unjudging peers sharing the same experience.

Advertising:
Cookie aims to get a range of advertisers as diverse as the editorial content. And from pantry staples to high-end fashion brands, it has been successful at getting all types of ad pages. The Cookie ad team has even broken into such lucrative categories as automotive and beauty.

Awards:
In 2007, after Cookie s first full year of publication, it was nominated for General Excellence by its peers at the American Society of the Magazine Editors (it's comparable to being nominated for a Best Picture Academy Award). In 2008, Cookie was again nominated in the same category. In 2007, Cookie was named Ad Age's Launch of the Year. In 2008, Cookie made Adweek's Hot List. Also, in 2008, editor-in-chief Pilar Guzman was named one of the Crain's "40 Under 40" the only publishing executive to make the prestigious list this year.


Product Description
Cookie is the new magazine that celebrates the joys of parenthood. Each issue brings you the best of everything for you and your child ? fashion style, travel gear, books, toys, music and design...plus parenting advice from the world's leading experts. Cookie is full of fun and inspiration to lead a rich, wonderful life with your children!


Customer Reviews:   Read 53 more reviews...

1 out of 5 stars So pretentious   November 5, 2006
Amy M. (Pasadena, CA)
111 out of 118 found this review helpful

I had hopes that this magazine would be a nice alternative to the others out there. From the moment I opened it, it felt so smug. I gave it a chance and read it cover to cover (the April issue). But what finally did me in (after having read that I could buy an $800 blouse to make me feel pretty in that after pregnancy stage, that I could match my children's shoes to my Jimmy Choo's and finally that I could buy my child the latest $300 tricycle) was the article entitled "Normal" about a child who was misdiagnosed with Autism. The article discussed how distraught the mother was after her child was diagnosed with Autism to the point that she tried to committ suicide. The article ended with the fact that the child turned out to be a genius. What was the point of this article? To say thank God it wasn't true? What about those parents out there who have an autistic child, how does this article make them feel? The article was painful and insensitive. There are better ways to spend you $10 than on Cookie.


2 out of 5 stars not COOL   May 29, 2006
J. lopez
54 out of 61 found this review helpful

I have to agree with those who didn't care for it. the only thing I liked was one article written by a Dad who was skateboarding with his son. It was witty, insightful and inspirational. the rest of the mag just seemed totally irrelevent to my life. It is aimed at people who dry-clean their childrens clothes. Does anyone do that? I don't want my kids to be that concerned with clothes and money. the few issues I read made me mad and depressed. I've never written a review before but felt compelled to do so regarding this lame magazine. Give me break with that $400 cashmere hoodie for my son! my son likes his vilified character t-shirts and that is what matters. He is not a reflection of my style, he is a reflection of his own. Get over yourselves!


1 out of 5 stars This is nothing more than a high-end children's fashion magazine.   March 2, 2006
JudyV (McDonald, PA)
51 out of 58 found this review helpful

This is the worst "parenting" magazine I have ever seen. It was filled (well over half the magazine) with ads from high-end designers. Aside from the overwhelming number of ads, the articles were not benefecial at all. If you want a good magazine, buy American Baby or Baby Talk.


2 out of 5 stars You want WHO to subscribe to this?   November 30, 2005
E. Moore (NC)
34 out of 39 found this review helpful

Sorry, but you really missed the mark here with this magazine. First off, it's mostly ads, which a lot of the parenting magazines are. That gets old. Then, I find that most of the items reviewed and featured in your columns are *very* high end and not really in the budget for most families with small children at home. Assuming that is your target audience, the average mother of small children, you've missed the mark. Don't get me wrong, I love buying quality products for my children, but it can't *all* be Ralph Lauren and $200+ baby slings.


2 out of 5 stars Entitled and Mean Spirited   May 5, 2006
C. Copeland (Southern California)
27 out of 33 found this review helpful

I was going to buy this and then stumbled on it in the doctor's office. I love InStyle, Lucky and other shopping mags, but the tone of this is mean and snooty. There are too many ads, and very little content. There's a Q&A section about sex after baby that's just mean, threatening that if you don't jump back in, "one of you will start sleeping with the girl in marketing..." Way to put an anti-feminist tone on sex after baby. Yuck.




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