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

This J. Press x Harris Tweed Sport Coat Is the Perfect Autumn Investment

Toss one on and it's instantly F. Scott Fitzgerald meets P.G. Wodehouse

Why 1990s Eric Clapton Is a Men's Style Icon

Dig back into photos of rock gods in the 1980s and '90s for inspiration

The 9 New Books You Should Be Reading This October

A new John le Carré, Zadie Smith short stories, Ben Lerner's latest, a Thomas Edison biography and so much more

The North Face Revives an Iconic Fleece Just in Time for Fall

Climbing legend Conrad Anker weighs in on why the Denali is such a classic

Review: It's Time to Reconsider the Camaro

On a test drive down the eastern seaboard, I realized what the Camaro is really about

The 8 New Books You Should Be Reading This September

It's basically Christmas season for book lovers, with new titles from Malcolm Gladwell, Josh Gondelman and Patti Smith

Japan's Divine Iced Coffee in a Can Has Finally Made Its Way to America

Japan teaches the U.S that canned coffee doesn't have to suck

Review: Conrad Washington DC Spells the End for the "Boutique" Era

Brilliant design, comfortable beds and excellent service: this is what a luxury hotel should be

Why People Are Still Obsessed With Ralph Lauren’s Polo Bear

After nearly 30 years the fuzzy little guy has officially reached icon status

Review: Does Sid Mashburn Make the Perfect Shirt?

How a lunchtime buying experience changed my entire sartorial outlook

The 7 Books You Should Read This August

From a search for faith in the heartland to the debut title from the "voice of a generation," these books are worth picking up

NYC’s Most Powerful Restaurant Couple Just Split Up

Daniel Humm and Will Guidara of Eleven Madison Park will go their separate ways