The end of the magazine
Friends—this is not the post I wanted to make.
Since November, I’ve been working on sorting out the future of the magazine: interviewing potential buyers, getting a proper valuation, compiling whatever information I could into spreadsheets. I was confident that the magazine had a way forward—work was starting on an April/May 2025 issue with a print deadline of March 14th. That has since changed, and I’ve made the decision to shutter the magazine.
I don’t have it in me to take it back up myself, and I don’t have it in me to go through another five months of sorting out a new owner. I’m concerned about the impending rising costs of paper, ink, and printing plates due to tariffs (a lot of wood pulp for manufacturing American paper comes from Canada). I’m concerned about the future of the Postal Service—without the USPS, the magazine could not happen. Bulk Mail is by far the cheapest way to send out subscriber issues.
For a rough idea, shipping via USPS Bulk Mail costs around $750 per issue.
Through UPS (sending magazines at an individual rate, since there is no bulk rate), it would cost $4,280—and that’s with a discount.
If you used the regular UPS ground shipping rate, it would cost $13,260 to ship subscriptions for one issue.
Should there be another 25% increase in paper, plates, and ink, the cost of printing one issue would be well above $6,000.
It wouldn’t be sustainable.
I love this magazine. I love the community it’s created. I’ve volunteered 5+ years of my life to transforming it to what it is today—I am immensely proud of the work and humbled by its reception. I also realize that this is an independent publication—there’s no massive backings from deep-pocket investors or a publishing house to oversee costs. I kept it going without ever paying myself because I believed in it.
Sometimes things end, no matter how good they may be.
I will be reimbursing advertisers who paid in-full for 2025 ads. If you’re a subscriber who’s totally new to the magazine, I would love to send you six back issues in place of the issues you would have received. If you’ve been a subscriber and are missing issues or want extra copies, I would love to send some along, again in place of the issues you would have received.
E-commerce will be on the website, at least to September 2025 since that’s what the website is paid through. If there’s interest, I’ll keep e-commerce available beyond September, but I will at least be keeping the website live and adding more past articles to the blog. If you have any questions, you can reach me at info@montanawoman.com (but understand that I may take a bit of time to reply as I sort things out).
Thank you, dear reader, for being here.
All my love,
Megan
As I walked into the living room of Charly Blackwood and Will Shanahan on a Wednesday afternoon, I was welcomed by the smells of cinnamon, warm buttery oil, and sweet honey, and a nod from their cat Zoey.