The digital copy of the UK edition is showing 108 pages. Maisy Stella is the Vanities person, there's a few short articles about American politics, then it's the Serena section, where the shoot seems to look better as part of an article than it does as disembodied images on the internet. Melinda French Gates talks about giving, along with other women involved in philanthropy.
There's an article about the source of the family fortune of a German industrialist, Klaus-Michael Kuehne, a profile of America's Solicitor General, Elizabeth Prelogar, an article about American Catholicism and its association with celebrity right-wingers, a look back at Saturday Night Live's first episode, and then a piece about Tim Mellon, one of Donald Trump's biggest donors. The back page Proust Questionnaire is Stanley Tucci.
It's not Vanity Fair's fault, but I cannot relate to any of this content. The magazine occupies a strange place in the Conde Nast stable, in that it's an American publication - but it doesn't take the form of an import magazine in the UK. It's printed and appears on the newsstand priced in £, as if it's like UK Vogue or any other home-produced magazine.
When Conde Nast had more money, it did contain more content that spanned the two nations, but that's since been reduced to various supplements and insert sections that are directed to the UK audience.
Speaking of which, in the UK, this issue comes with the Autumn edition of the On Time watch supplement, which has cyclist Sir Mark Cavendish on the cover.