Mary-Kay Wilmers

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Mary-Kay Wilmers, Hon. FRSL (born 19 July 1938) is an American editor and journalist. She was the editor of the London Review of Books from 1992<ref name="London Review of Books £27m in the red – but it isn’t counting">Brooks, Richard. "London Review of Books £27m in the red – but it isn’t counting"Template:Dead linkTemplate:Cbignore, The Times, 24 January 2010. Retrieved 7 February 2011.</ref> to 2021, and she remains consulting editor.<ref name="FloodJan21" /> She is a recipient of the Benson Medal from the Royal Society of Literature.

Family and education

Mary-Kay Wilmers was born in Chicago, Illinois, and grew up in New York City. She lived in the United States for the first eight years of her childhood, by the end of which she had lived in 10 different homes and attended eight different schools in America and Europe.<ref name="nyt">Template:Cite news</ref> Her mother, Cecilia Eitington, was of Russian-Jewish descent, and her father's family were, she said, "very English", but they had come from Germany.<ref name="In conversation with Mary-Kay Wilmers">Watson, Heather. "In conversation with Mary-Kay Wilmers", P.N. Review, Volume 28, Number 1, September – October 2001. Retrieved 14 February 2011.</ref> For many years Wilmers worked on a book, published in 2009 as The Eitingons: A Twentieth Century Story, recounting the story of her mother's Russian relations, including the psychoanalyst Max Eitingon, as well as her grandfather's cousin Leonid Eitingon, an agent in Joseph Stalin's NKVD who was responsible for masterminding the assassination of Leon Trotsky.<ref name="Tonkin">Template:Cite news</ref>

In 1946 Wilmers' parents moved to Europe, spending time in London, Portugal, Belgium, and Switzerland. Her father Charles Wilmers was President of Sofina, a Belgian multinational utilities holding company.<ref name="The London Review of Books celebrated its 30th Birthday">McKay, Sinclair. "The London Review of Books celebrated its 30th Birthday", The Daily Telegraph, 30 October 2009. Retrieved 14 February 2011.</ref> Wilmers was educated in Brussels and at boarding school in England. She said that for some time she was happier speaking French than English.<ref name="In conversation with Mary-Kay Wilmers"/> Her brother Robert G. Wilmers was an American billionaire and chairman of M&T Bank until his death in 2017.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

At Oxford University, where Wilmers read modern languages at St Hugh's College from 1957,<ref>"Modern Languages at St Hugh's" Template:Webarchive, St Hugh's Newsletter, Spring 2008, p. 14.</ref> she befriended Alan Bennett, later a regular contributor to the London Review of Books. Bennett said about Wilmers's time at university: "Outside the novels of Nancy Mitford or Evelyn Waugh, I had never come across anyone who behaved so confidently or in such a cosmopolitan fashion."<ref name="Mary-Kay Wilmers: Queen of Plots">McElvoy, Anne. "Mary-Kay Wilmers: Queen of Plots", The Sunday Times, 18 October 2009. Retrieved 8 February 2011.</ref> For the week of her finals she moved into the Randolph Hotel, staying with her father whose presence was required due to her threat to not sit the exams.<ref name="Mary-Kay Wilmers: A Life In Writing">Wroe, Nicholas, "Mary-Kay Wilmers: 'I like difficult women. Not just because I'm a bit difficult myself. I like their complication'" (A Life In... Books), The Guardian, 24 October 2009. Retrieved 7 February 2011.</ref>

Career

Early career

After her graduation in 1960, she thought about becoming a translator at the United Nations, but instead went to work at the publishers Faber and Faber, employed at first as a secretary.<ref name="Mary-Kay Wilmers: A Life In Writing"/> On one occasion she thought she might be sacked for saying "bugger" in front of T. S. Eliot, whose letters she used to type.<ref name="Mary-Kay Wilmers: Queen of Plots"/> She later became an editor at Faber and Faber, where she commissioned many books, among them Patriarchal Attitudes by Eva Figes, one of the first works of British feminism.<ref name="Mary-Kay Wilmers: A Life In Writing"/> She left Faber aged 29 to become deputy editor of The Listener, edited by Karl Miller, and in the 1970s had a spell at The Times Literary Supplement (TLS).<ref name="Tonkin"/>

London Review of Books

In 1979, Wilmers joined Miller in founding London Review of Books (LRB), conceived to fill a gap in the market as a year-long industrial dispute had closed The Times Literary Supplement.<ref name="Happy birthday, LRB">Template:Cite news</ref> The new review was an offshoot of The New York Review of Books, at first appearing folded inside the older publication.<ref name="London Review of Books marks its 30th year">Template:Cite news</ref> The first edition appeared in October 1979.

The New York Review of Books withdrew its support after a few months, and in May 1980, Wilmers made the first of a number of investments of money inherited from her father, establishing an independent London Review of Books and later making herself the majority shareholder.<ref name="Mary-Kay Wilmers: Queen of Plots"/><ref name="Mary-Kay Wilmers: A Life In Writing"/> In January 2010, The Times reported that the review was £27 million in debt to the Wilmers family trust. "It's family money and the debts have been rising for many years," Wilmers said. "But I really just look after the commas."<ref name="London Review of Books £27m in the red – but it isn’t counting"/>

Wilmers became co-editor in 1988 and editor in 1992. Her style was to take a highly interventionist approach:<ref name="Mary-Kay Wilmers: A Life In Writing"/> "You want to help readers along. Not discourage them by making them go through a swamp of unnecessary sentences", she said.<ref name="The London Review of Books celebrated its 30th Birthday"/> Her friend Hilary Mantel called Wilmers "a presiding genius", and Andrew O'Hagan explained: "She can’t bear a lazy sentence or secondhand metaphor. She’s tireless in her commitment to the paper".<ref name="Mary-Kay Wilmers: Queen of Plots"/> In 2009 the London ReviewTemplate:'s circulation was 48,000,<ref name="Mary-Kay Wilmers: Queen of Plots"/> making it the largest-selling literary publication in Europe. Wilmers stepped down as editor after almost 30 years in 2021, remaining at the magazine as consulting editor.<ref name="FloodJan21">Template:Cite web</ref>

As an editor, Wilmers has been closely associated with the work of a number of novelists and essayists, including Alan Bennett, John Lanchester, Jenny Diski, Blake Morrison, Alan Hollinghurst, Seamus Heaney, Ian McEwan, Salman Rushdie, Julian Barnes, Craig Raine, Colm Tóibín, Stefan Collini, James Wood, Linda Colley, Jacqueline Rose, Paul Foot, Tariq Ali and Edward Luttwak. Many of these were published prominently when at the beginnings of their careers.<ref name="London Review of Books marks its 30th year"/>

Politically, the review is not known for following a consistent party political line,<ref name="London Review of Books marks its 30th year"/> although Wilmers described herself as being "captivated by the left but not of it".<ref name="Mary-Kay Wilmers: Queen of Plots"/> Under her editorship the review's treatment of political matters sometimes attracted controversy. In 2006, an article by academics John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt was criticised in some quarters for its claim that the foreign policy of the United States was in the grip of an "Israel lobby". Wilmers has herself said, "I'm unambiguously hostile to Israel because it's a mendacious state",<ref name="Mary-Kay Wilmers: Queen of Plots"/> an assessment that has not gone unchallenged.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> An article by the Cambridge historian Mary Beard, published after the events of September 11, 2001, attracted some attention for suggesting that "America had it coming",<ref name="Mary-Kay Wilmers: Queen of Plots"/> and when David Marquand, the political historian and principal of Mansfield College, Oxford, submitted a review praising Tony Blair's handling of the post-11 September period as "impeccable", Wilmers replied saying, "I can't square it with my conscience to praise so wholeheartedly Blair's conduct" and pulled the piece. Marquand announced that he was "utterly shocked".<ref name="Mary-Kay Wilmers: Queen of Plots"/>

Honours

A book of tributes to Wilmers, Bad Character, was published privately in June 2008 and distributed as a limited edition.<ref name="Mary-Kay Wilmers: A Life In Writing" />

In 2017, she was elected an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, as well as being honoured with their Benson Medal.<ref>Onwuemezi, Natasha, "Rankin, McDermid and Levy named new RSL fellows", The Bookseller, 7 June 2017.</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>"The Benson Medal", The Royal Society of Literature.</ref>

Personal life

In 1968, Wilmers married film director Stephen Frears, with whom she had two sons, Sam and Will. They lived on Gloucester Crescent in Camden Town, London. Frears left Wilmers while she was pregnant with their second son Will in the early 1970s, and the couple divorced.<ref name="Mary-Kay Wilmers: A Life in Writing">Wroe, Nicholas, "Mary-Kay Wilmers: 'I like difficult women. Not just because I'm a bit difficult myself. I like their complication'" (A Life In... Books), The Guardian, 24 October 2009. Retrieved 7 February 2011.</ref> Nina Stibbe, the live-in nanny that Wilmers hired in the early 1980s, wrote letters home that described the North London "literati" life; these were compiled, published, and adapted into the 2016 TV series Love, Nina.

References

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Further reading

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