Last night Vogue took home Magazine of the Year at the annual National Magazine Awards, while The New Yorker and New York tied for the most awards, with three each. (New York won for magazine section, design, and columns by art critic Jerry Saltz, and we’re grateful for each Ellie statue.) Sixty-six magazines were nominated, and there were six first-time winners: The Atavist, The Hollywood Reporter, Pacific Standard, the Texas Observer, Nautilus, and Vice. Congratulations to all of the winners listed below, and anyone looking for some excellent reading material.
Magazine of the Year
Vogue
General Excellence, General Interest Magazines
The New Yorker
General Excellence, Service and Lifestyle Magazines
Glamour
General Excellence, Style and Design Magazines
Garden & Gun
General Excellence, Active Interest Magazines
Men’s Health
General Excellence, Special Interest Magazines
The Hollywood Reporter
General Excellence, Literature, Science and Politics Magazines
Nautilus
Design
New York
Photography
National Geographic
Single-Topic Issue
San Francisco for “The Oakland Issue,” June
Magazine Section
New York for “Strategist”
Website
Nautilus
Tablet Magazine
National Geographic
Multimedia
The Texas Observer in Partnership With The Guardian for “Beyond the Border,” by Melissa del Bosque
Video
Vice for “The Islamic State,” by Medyan Dairieh
Public Interest
Pacific Standard for “Women Aren’t Welcome Here,” by Amanda Hess, January/February
Personal Service
O, The Oprah Magazine for “Ready or Not: The Caregiver’s Guide,” November
Leisure Interests
Backpacker for “The Complete Guide to Fire,” edited by Casey Lyons, October
Reporting
GQ for “Inside the Iron Closet,” by Jeff Sharlet, February
Feature Writing
The Atavist for “Love and Ruin,” by James Verini, February
Feature Photography
TIME for “Crime Without Punishment,” photographs by Jerome Sessini, August
Essays and Criticism
The New Yorker for “This Old Man,” by Roger Angell, February 17 and 24
Columns and Commentary
New York for three columns by Jerry Saltz: “Zombies on the Walls: Why Does So Much New Abstraction Look the Same?,” June 16-29; “Taking in Jeff Koons, Creator and Destroyer of Worlds,” June 30-July 13; and “Post-Macho God: Matisse’s Cut-Outs Are World-Historically Gorgeous,” October 8
Fiction
The New Yorker for “The Emerald Light in the Air,” by Donald Antrim, February 3