The Element of Lavishness: Letters of William Maxwell and Sylvia Townsend Warner, 1938-1978 FROM THE PUBLISHER
For forty years, until her death in 1978, Sylvia Townsend Warner (poet, novelist, and short-story writer) and her New Yorker editor William Maxwell (himself a fiction writer of great distinction) exchanged more than 1,300 letters. Their formal relationship quickly grew into a real, unshakable love, and their letters back and forth became the most significant and longest-lasting correspondence of their lives. As Maxwell told the editor of these letters, "Sylvia needed to write for an audience, a specific person, in order to bring out her pleasure in enchanting," and Maxwell was that person, both as editor and as correspondent. Warner brought out the best in Maxwell too. "I suspect that of all the writers I edited, I was most influenced by Sylvia...I think that what you are infinitely charmed by you can't help unconsciously imitating." In these letters they wrote about everything that amused, moved, and perplexed themthe physical world, personal relationships, the New York City blackout, the Cuban missile crisis, their ceaseless reading, the coming of old age. Gratitude and love are on every page. Not to mention pleasure and delight.
About the Author:Michael Steinman is the editor the Happiness of Getting it Down Right: Letters of William Maxwell and Frank O'Connor. He lives in Melville, New York.
FROM THE CRITICS
New Yorker
Both writers excelled not only in arpeggios of description but in
observations of the human heart so incisive that they constitute
revelation.
Merle Rubin - Los Angeles Times
A wonderfully colorful sampling, intelligently arranged and
annotated.
Kerry Fried - Newsday
Anecdote becomes art, and literature is proved the stuff of life
in the letters of two of the 20th Century's finest-and underread-authors.
New York Times Book Review
Maxwell and Warner are articulate to a degree normal people
need not bother even to aspire to. A feast.
Colin Walters - Washington Times
In addition to a fascinating survey of the pair's work ... it
is a volume of affectionately brilliant casual writing.Read all 9 "From The Critics" >