EDITOR's NOTE.  The following  excerpted item on VN New Yorker  editor William Maxwell
may be worth reading to see what, if anything, it contains about his relationship with VN. NABOKV-L would be grateful for comment on the matter. As I recall Maxwell's papers are at the University of Illinois and someone who was working on  gave a paper at MLA meeting a few years ago.
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Subject: for over 40 years he edited such literary giants as .. Vladimir Nabokov ...
Date: Sun, 16 Jun 2002 15:38:09 -0400
From: "Sandy P. Klein" <spklein52@hotmail.com>
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http://www.sun-sentinel.com/features/books/search/sfl-bkflblighjun16.story
 
 
My Mentor tribute to writer, friend

By Thomas Bligh
special Correspondent
Posted June 16 2002
 
My Mentor: A Young Man's Friendship with William Maxwell. Alec Wilkinson. Houghton Mifflin. $22. 192 pp.

William Maxwell has been called a writer's writer, which suggests his books are highly literary and difficult. They are not. They're merely beautifully written. His novels often concern a lost childhood in the Midwest, with themes of friendship and fractured families.

So Long, See You Tomorrow, which won the American Book Award in 1980, and 1948's Time Will Darken It are considered his finest novels, though his earlier books, They Came Like Swallows and The Folded Leaf, made his reputation. They Came Like Swallows is in the Modern Library.

Yet no biography of Maxwell has been published to date, nor has anyone published a full-length study of his works. This has much to do with Maxwell's other career as a fiction editor at The New Yorker, where for over 40 years he edited such literary giants as J.D. Salinger, John Updike, Eudora Welty, Mary McCarthy, and Vladimir Nabokov.

His day job took time away from his novels. Maxwell died in July 2000, and Alec Wilkinson's memoir of their 25-year friendship is a great tribute to a writer who seldom drew attention to himself.