Jason Diamond

Jason Diamond is the author of the memoir Searching for John Hughes. His next book, The Sprawl, will be published by Coffee House Press in 2020. He has written for the New York Times, Eater, The Paris Review, Pitchfork, the Wall Street Journal, Rolling Stone and many other publications.

All Articles From Jason Diamond

J.G. Melon and the Greatness of the Old-School Preppy Bar

Burgers, mugs of beer, random stuff on the walls: what more could you want?

NBA All-Star Weekend Is a Networking Mecca

Off the court, players mingled with chefs, entrepreneurs and would-be investors at Chicago's coolest hangouts

An Ode to the Shaggy Dog, The Greatest of All the Sweaters

The best articles of clothing don't say anything about you — they speak only for themselves

Unsung Gems: A Tour of the Diamond District's Old-School Dining Scene

From falafel carts to the city's best Ukrainian restaurant, here's where to nosh in Howard Ratner's New York

Torien Is the Rare NY Restaurant That Gives You Time to Actually Enjoy Your Meal

Manhattan has a new yakitori capital and it's worth every penny

The 6 New Books You Should Be Reading This February

A baseball novel, a new kind of George Washington biography, 1970s cinema and more

Ira Kaplan of Yo La Tengo Is a Secret Style God

On the enduring power of the simple striped T-shirt

Are You a Part of the Larry David Generation?

If you were raised on "Seinfeld" and went grey during "Curb," the chances are pretty, pretty, pretty good

The 7 New Books You Should Be Reading This January

Zora Neale Hurston, a seminal investigation of male sexuality and the Japanese art of living in the moment

An Affordable Way to Own a Rare Work by David Hockney

"My Window" pulls together the artist's iPhone and iPad drawings

The Best Meals of 2019 Were the Ones I Didn't Find on the Internet

From tongue sandwiches in Brooklyn to egg salad in Tokyo

The 25 Best Hanukkah and Christmas Snacks, Ranked

Go ahead and disagree with us. 'Tis the season.

In Defense of Voluntarily Checking a Bag

One of air travel's oldest traditions should be thought of as a luxury, not a burden