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Celebrated book editor Alice Mayhew dies at age 87

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New York (AP) — Alice Mayhew, the celebrated and influentia­l editor of political and historical works whose authors ranged from Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein to Taylor Branch and Doris Kearns Goodwin, died Tuesday at age 87.

Simon & Schuster, which she joined in 1971, announced that she died “peacefully” at her home in Manhattan. Her death came days after the loss of another Simon & Schuster institutio­n, novelist Mary Higgins Clark, who died last week.

A New York City native, Mayhew edited some of the most notable nonfiction releases of the past half century, including Woodward and Bernstein’s landmark Watergate best-seller “All the President’s Men,” among the first books to broadly investigat­e a sitting presidenti­al administra­tion; the feminist classic “Our Bodies, Ourselves”; Branch’s Pulitzer Prize winning “Parting the Waters” and Goodwin’s Pulitzer Prize winning “No Ordinary Time.” She also worked with former President Jimmy Carter, Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and the historians Stephen Ambrose, Michael Beschloss and David Herbert Donald among others.

“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,” Simon & Schuster CEO Carolyn Reidy wrote Tuesday in a company-wide memo.

One of her longest partnershi­ps was with Woodward, starting with “All the President’s Men,” continuing through his 2018 bestseller about the Trump administra­tion, “Fear,” and a planned second book on the Trump years, expected this fall.

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