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Maxwell and Perkins
He was published by Maxwell Perkins, who also served as Fitzgerald's editor.
He told his editor Maxwell Perkins that the novel was a " consciously artistic achievement " and a " purely creative work — not trashy imaginings as in my stories but the sustained imagination of a sincere and yet radiant world ".
The editor Maxwell Perkins, noted for editing novels of Ernest Hemingway and Thomas Wolfe, would guide Paton's first novel through publication with Scribner's.
His mother was the sister of Maxwell Perkins, an editor at the publishing house of Charles Scribner's Sons.
When he heard the novel had been accepted, Scott wrote to publisher Maxwell Perkins, urging an accelerated release: " I have so many things dependent on its success — including of course a girl ".
Over the course of her first six weeks at the clinic, she wrote an entire novel and sent it to Scott's publisher, Maxwell Perkins.
Maxwell Perkins
William Maxwell Evarts (" Max ") Perkins ( September 20, 1884 – June 17, 1947 ), was the editor for Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald and Thomas Wolfe.
His home in Windsor, Vermont was purchased from John Skinner in the 1820s for $ 5, 000 by William M. Evarts and passed down to Evarts ' daughter, Elizabeth Hoar Evarts Perkins, who in turn left the home to family members, including her son Maxwell.
The inn houses the Maxwell Perkins Library, which displays and collects items related to Maxwell Perkins and his extended family.
His house in New Canaan, Connecticut, the Maxwell E. Perkins House, is on the National Register of Historic Places.
* A third book of Perkins ' letters is also in print: Editor to Author: The Letters of Maxwell E. Perkins, edited by John Hall Whelock.
* Father to Daughter: The Family Letters of Maxwell Perkins is a collection of letters written by Perkins to his wife and five daughters, collected and edited by his grand daughters.
* " William Maxwell Evarts Perkins.
* Snapdragon Inn, former home of Maxwell Perkins in Windsor, Vermont
fr: Maxwell Perkins
" Zelda was writing furiously ; she finished the novel on March 9 and sent it to Scott's publisher, their friend Maxwell Perkins at Scribner's.
* Maxwell Perkins 1903, noted editor at Charles Scribner's Sons, editor of F. Scott Fitzgerald
The home was purchased from John Skinner in the 1820s for $ 5, 000 by William M. Evarts and was passed down to his daughter, Elizabeth Hoar Evarts Perkins, who left the home to family members, including her son Maxwell Perkins.

Maxwell and Madison
:" Abbott-Detroit, Allen, American-Six, Anderson, Apperson, Arbenz, Auburn, Austin, Bell, Biddle, Brewster, Bour-Davis, Briscoe, Buick, Cadillac, Cameron, Case, Chalmers, Chandler, Chevrolet, Cole, Crow-Elkhart, Daniels, Davis, Detroiter, Dispatch, Dixie Flyer, Doble, Dodge, Dorris, Dort, Drexel, Elcar, Elgin, Emerson, Empire, Enger, Fiat, Ford, Fostoria, Franklin, F. R. P., Glide, Grant, Hackett, H. A. L., Halladay, Harroun, Harvard, Haynes, Hollier, Hudson, Hupmobile, Inter-State, Jackson, Jeffery, Jordan, King, Kissel, Kline, Laurel, Lenox, Lexington, Liberty, Locomobile, Lozier, Luverne, Madison, Maibohm, Majestic, Marion-Handley, Marmon, Maxwell, McFarlan, Mecca, Mercer, Metz, Mitchell, Moline-Knight, Monarch, Monitor, Monroe, Moon, Morse, Murray, National, Nelson, Oakland, Oldsmobile, Owen, Packard, Paige, Partin-Palmer, Paterson, Pathfinder, Peerless, Pierce-Arrow, Pilot, Premier, Princess, Pullman, Regal, Republic, Reo, Richmond, Roamer, Ross, Saxon, Scripps-Booth, Spaulding, Simplex, Singer, Standard, Stanley Steamer, Stearns-Knight, Stephens, Stewart, Studebaker, Stutz, Sun, Velie, Westcott, White, Willys-Knight, Winton, and Yale.
* Rebecca Madison – The series villain, chairperson of Maximum Inc. and widow of Maxwell Madison Sr., the 23rd Phantom's killer.
Other than Graft and her son, Maxwell Madison Jr., no other humans are employed by Maximum, which has its own biots perform all labour.
* Maxwell Madison Jr. – Rebecca's sociopathic son, whose intelligence is belied by his laziness and disinterest in almost everything.
* Heisenberg – A shape-shifting fractal biot built by Max Madison Jr. using nanites grown in space by Sean One, named by Maxwell after the German physicist Werner Heisenberg.
* Maxwell Madison Sr. – Rebecca's deceased husband, who was killed along with the 23rd Phantom in a toxic train wreck.
Rebecca captures his brainwaves and stores them in an enormous computer, and is constantly seeking a stable way to transfer them into a biot or preferably a living body to effectively resurrect Maxwell Madison Sr.

Maxwell and Grant
Cimarron was on the stage coach route along the Mountain Branch of the Santa Fe Trail, and was the headquarters of the Maxwell Land Grant.
" Using the pen name of Maxwell Grant and claiming the stories were " from The Shadow's private annals as told to " him, Gibson wrote 282 out of 325 tales over the next 20 years: a novel-length story twice a month ( 1st and 15th ).
But the remaining eight, The Shadow Strikes, Beware Shadow, Cry Shadow, The Shadow's Revenge, Mark of The Shadow, Shadow Go Mad, Night of The Shadow, and The Shadow, Destination: Moon, were not penned by Gibson but by Dennis Lynds under the " Maxwell Grant " byline.
It was named in honor of Lucien Maxwell, who provided the land for the original townsite from his Maxwell Land Grant.
The original for the Raton townsite were purchased from the Maxwell Land Grant in 1880.
The winners of the election included the burgess Henry Anderson, councilmen Joseph Wallace, John Walberg, John Maxwell, WJ Vance, Thomas Clark, J Grant Anderson, Fred Edwards, tax collector John Hutzen, and school directors Jones, Johnson, Scott, Colmey, Crossey, and Anderson.
Maxwell sold the ranch to the Maxwell Land Grant and Railroad Company, which gave up and handed it on to a Dutch development company, which decided to parcel it out to ranchers.
In 1963, vice-president of the National Council Norton Clapp contributed funds to purchase another of land within the Maxwell Land Grant, consisting of the Baldy Mountain mining area.
* Traded by Lakers with Travis Knight and conditional 2001 1st-round pick to New York Knicks as part of four-team deal on September 20, 2000 ( Lakers received Emanual Davis, Greg Foster, Horace Grant and Chuck Person from Seattle SuperSonics ; New York also received Luc Longley and two 2nd-round picks from Phoenix Suns and Lazaro Borrell, Vernon Maxwell, Vladimir Stepania and conditional 2001 1st-round pick from Seattle ; Phoenix received Chris Dudley, conditional 2001 1st-round pick and cash from New York ; Seattle received Patrick Ewing from New York ).
He founded and was president of the Santa Fe National Bank, and pursued broad business interests in land, rail, mining, and finance including president of the massive Maxwell Land Grant Company.
Maxwell Grant was a pen name used by the authors of The Shadow pulp magazine stories.
He adopted the pen name Maxwell Grant, taking the name from two magic dealers he knew, Maxwell Holden and U. F.
Three authors besides Gibson have used the Maxwell Grant pen name: Theodore Tinsley, who wrote 27 Shadow stories between 1936 and 1943 ; Bruce Elliott, who wrote 15 Shadow stories between 1946 and 1948 ; and Dennis Lynds, who wrote nine Shadow paperback novels between 1964 and 1967.
Grant, Maxwell
The Golden Master ( 1939 ) is a pulp novel featuring The Shadow written by Walter Gibson under the house name Maxwell Grant.
In Animal Man # 13 ( July 1989 ), also written by Grant Morrison, Maxwell decides to retire and performs a ceremony to find a successor.
Other notable Joans include Judi Dench, Zoe Caldwell, Elisabeth Bergner, Constance Cummings, Ann Casson, Roberta Maxwell, Barbara Jefford, Pat Galloway, Sarah Miles, Ellen Geer, Jane Alexander, Lee Grant, Janet Suzman, and Eileen Atkins.
George Maxwell Robeson ( March 16, 1829 – September 27, 1897 ) was an American Republican Party politician and lawyer from New Jersey who served as a Union army general during the American Civil War, and then as Secretary of the Navy during the Grant Administration.
He also penned 10 Belmont Books mass-market paperbacks of The Shadow from 1964 to 1967 under the Shadow's author by-line Maxwell Grant.
Later, Istočni Vračar extended to Grantovac, an area of land belonging to the American consul Edward Maxwell Grant and Krunski Venac around the Krunska street, a street starting from the Royal Park and ending with Kalenić market.

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