Legendary Editor Alice Mayhew, 87, Had A Deep Sag Harbor Connection - 27 East

Legendary Editor Alice Mayhew, 87, Had A Deep Sag Harbor Connection

icon 1 Photo
Alice Mayhew

Alice Mayhew

Thomas Clavin on Feb 10, 2020

The legion of legendary editors who earned fierce loyalty from some of the top authors in the United States was diminished last week by the death of Alice Mayhew.

She died on February 4, at age 87, at her apartment in Manhattan. This past Sunday, a funeral was held in Sag Harbor Village, where she had lived part-time for decades, first on Madison Street and then on John Street.

She left no immediate survivors; her brother, Leonard, also a Sag Harbor resident, died in 2012.

Ms. Mayhew could be considered old school in the book publishing industry, in that she remained with the same company — Simon and Schuster, where at her death she was a vice president and editorial director — for her entire career and was the editor of many of her authors’ books for most of their careers.

She was born in Brooklyn on June 14, 1932, grew up in the Bronx, and joined Simon and Schuster in 1971. The publication of “Our Bodies, Ourselves” two year later was the first in a seemingly uninterrupted string of books edited by Ms. Mayhew that achieved critical or commercial success, and often both.

Her editing of “All the President’s Men” was crucial to its success and impact on American politics, with President Richard Nixon resigning in August 1974, two months after the book’s release. With that book she began a long professional relationship with the author Bob Woodward, which continued into 2018, when “Fear: Trump in the White House,” the 19th collaboration between Mr. Woodward and Ms. Mayhew, was released.

As part of Simon and Schuster’s 90th anniversary celebration in 2014, staffers selected 90 of their favorite titles published by the company. Of those, 29 had been edited by Ms. Mayhew.

During her 49-year tenure at Simon and Schuster, her roster of authors included President Jimmy Carter, John Dean, E.J. Dionne, Frances FitzGerald, Diane von Furstenberg, David Gergen, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Thomas Hoving, David Maraniss, Sylvia Nasar, William Shawcross, Sally Bedell Smith, James B. Stewart, Evan Thomas, Mark Whitaker, and Amy Wilentz.

Not surprisingly, the roster also included prominent authors who resided in and around Sag Harbor: Betty Friedan, J. Anthony Lukas, Kati Marton, Walter Isaacson, Judith Miller, Richard Reeves, Carl Bernstein, Robert Sam Anson, and Jennet Conant.

The writer and editor David Masello, in an op-ed in last Thursday’s edition of The New York Times, recalled working for Ms. Mayhew at Simon and Schuster in the early 1980s when he was just out of college.

He remembered the bottom drawer of her desk filled with postcards she had purchased during trips to France: “The moment she needed to thank an author for a revision or encourage a first-time novelist to keep going, she opened the drawer, pulled out a card and wrote with a pen she’d sometimes have tucked behind an ear. She paid no attention to whether the postcard image had any relationship to the recipient.”

Sag Harbor was both a retreat from office life for Ms. Mayhew and fertile ground for nurturing writing talent and professional connections — even if, at times, she had to delegate.

One of Mr. Masello’s assignments was to stay at Ms. Mayhew’s house in Sag Harbor to help Jane Howard finish her biography of Margaret Mead. “Every morning,” he recalled, “I walked down a quiet Sag Harbor street to meet Ms. Howard in her office, a converted garage. I drove to the local library to confirm facts and collate the finished pages.”

Also in Sag Harbor were cocktail parties “where Wilfred Sheed and Richard Reeves and James Salter gathered to clink and sip until dinner.”

The house on John Street was also where Ms. Mayhew hosted holiday gatherings. “There were wonderful Christmas parties with caroling ever year,” remembers Hilary Loomis, a writer whose husband, Robert, cut from the same cloth as Ms. Mayhew, was an editor at Random House for 54 years.

Immediately after Ms. Mayhew’s death, Carolyn Reidy, the president and CEO of Simon and Schuster, paid tribute to the editor and her traditional view of her role: “Alice’s loyalty to her authors was so absolute that despite her extraordinary record in publishing and the many offers she received over the years, she repeatedly refused to participate in any form of publicity or recognition for her achievements, never wavering in her conviction that the spotlight should always remain entirely focused on her authors.

“It is no wonder, then, that her dedication and commitment were frequently returned in the form of author-editor relationships that lasted decades and entire careers.”

You May Also Like:

LaLota Votes For Spending Compromise That Raises SALT Cap, But Only For 5 Years

The House of Representatives adopted a federal spending bill on Thursday afternoon that will raise ... 3 Jul 2025 by Michael Wright

John Adams Dix Windmill Dedicated in Westhampton Beach

Local elected officials and village residents from gathering on the morning of Wednesday, July 2 ... by Dan Stark

Small-Town America at Its Best: Southampton Village's Fourth of July Parade Is a Proud Tradition, More Than 100 Years Strong

When it comes to Southampton Village traditions, there is perhaps none bigger or more beloved ... by Cailin Riley

Elyce Arons Discusses Friendship, Mental Health, and Her New Book, 'We Might Just Make It After All: My Best Friendship With Kate Spade'

Elyce Arons met Kate Spade when the two were just 18 years old, both freshmen ... by Hope Hamilton

Quail Ridge Residents Scramble After Apartments Are Purchased for Redevelopment | 27Speaks Podcast

The tenants of Quail Ridge — the two dozen studio and one-bedroom apartments spread over ... by 27Speaks

A Family Partnership, Built on a Legacy of Giving: Norsic and Gulija Will Debut New Restaurant, Feniks, in Southampton Village This Summer

When Skip Norsic sold his business, the carting company Emil Norsic and Son, in 2022, ... by Cailin Riley

Southampton Police Reports for the Week of July 3

WESTHAMPTON BEACH — Marcelino Perez-Tax, 56, of Westhampton Beach was arrested on June 29 at 8:36 p.m. and charged with misdemeanor DWI. Village Police said Perez-Tax had a blood alcohol level of .08. He was pulled over after being observed driving on the shoulder and failing to stay in his lane, police reported. His vehicle was seized by police because he had a previous DWI conviction in Southampton Town in November of 2013. SOUTHAMPTON VILLAGE — Village Police received a report of a stolen vehicle from outside a Main Street business at 11 a.m. on June 25. A responding officer ... 2 Jul 2025 by Staff Writer

East End Little League Finishes Strong in District 36 Tournament

The East End Little League 12-and-under baseball All-Stars finished strong in District 36, winning their ... by Drew Budd

County Warns of Stepped-Up DWI Enforcement for Summer, Encourages Drivers To Take Ride Shares When Drinking

Suffolk County Sherriff Erron Toulon and County Executive Ed Romaine warned drivers this week that the county will be rolling out a new anti-DWI campaign that will feature stepped-up enforcement of drinking and driving laws and public outreach to discourage drunk driving. The sheriff’s office said that the county will step up patrols focusing on DWI enforcement and on-road sobriety checkpoints throughout the county, starting this coming weekend and continuing throughout the summer. Toulon said his office’s STOP DWI unit is on pace to break a record number of DWI arrests this year and encouraged young adults to turn to ... by Staff Writer

Southampton Town Moves To Rezone Hampton Bays Gateway, Potentially Halting Cannabis Shop

Southampton Town has proposed rezoning a portion of Montauk Highway leading into the Hampton Bays business district — a planning realignment that was recommended long ago and brought forward now in what appears to be an attempt to derail plans for a cannabis dispensary in an abandoned bank building, which has faced public opposition. The Town Board held a public hearing last week on the proposal to rezone about 26 properties along Montauk Highway to the east of the Hampton Bays hamlet center from “highway business” to “hamlet commercial.” The change would mean smaller-scale development, more green space between structures ... by Michael Wright