The Foreign Affairs bimonthly magazine is available for Kindle for a monthly subscription of $1.99. The reviews for the Kindle version of this journal are the best I’ve seen so far. Foreign Affairs is a 200 page journal/magazine, and is text and content based, which makes it a good fit for the Kindle.
The Council on Foreign Relations set the idea in motion to start a quarterly magazine that would become what is now called Foreign Affairs. The first issue of Foreign Affairs was published in September, 1922. Foreign Affairs includes expert analysis and serious discussion on international relations. Some major international subjects throughout history include: World War II, U.S relations with China, the Vietnam War, the Cold War and more recently the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars.
In the beginning, there were two editors: Archibald Cary Coolidge of Harvard and Hamilton (Ham) Fish Armstrong. Coolidge was near retirement age at 57, and Armstrong was just his late twenties.
Coolidge remained in Boston, loosely handling the magazine while still teaching at Harvard and managing his scholarly work. Armstrong ran the magazine’s New York office and handled all of the day to day issues and problems. He was also responsible for the magazine’s distinctive format, the choice of a very special light blue paper cover (from a remarkable Italian papermaker), the logo of a man on a horse. It was typical of the sense of style that Armstrong, son of a painter, Old New York and Hudson Valley to his fingertips, brought to this and all else throughout his life. More
The initial issue of Foreign Affairs included 12 point Caslon font, which was more legible than many other font types of the time. The current editor, James Hoge, brought a more modern version of this font back in 1993.
Foreign Affairs has a reputation of recruiting authors who are not mainstream. One particular example involves W.E.B DuBois, a distinguished African American author who wrote five articles for the magazine. His first article in 1925 helped define “the Color Line” as a major issue of the twentieth century.
Currently, Foreign Affairs is owned by the Council on Foreign Relations and their stock information is private.