Pursuant to ubi sunt ... About Sheri Martinelli, there is the engaging memoir by Anatole Broyard, _Kafka Was the Rage: a Greenwich Village Memoir_. 1st ed. New York: Carol Southern Books, an imprint of Crown Publishers, 1993, and now reprinted in paperback, New York: Vintage Books, 1997. Broyard includes a long description, about 90 pp., of his affair with one "Sheri Donatti," a bohemian painter, in New York during the late forties. It's Sheri Martinelli all right. Broyard's informative account makes for a funny, sad, sexy, and interesting story. At that same time a rival, William Gaddis, was also in love with Sheri, but Broyard prevailed. I believe Gaddis portrays them in his first novel _The Recognitions_ (New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1955). I was alerted to all of this by Henry Louis Gates, Jr., in a Life & Letters piece about Broyard in _The New Yorker_ (17 June 1996). A much older Sheri (weirdly veiled and mysterious, as witnessed in Orono some years ago) is the model for a character in Larry McMurtry's _Dead Man's Walk_ (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1995). McMurtry's book is one of a quartet of novels about nineteenth century Texas, a Great Western, begun in 1985 with the Pulitzer Prize winning _Lonesome Dove_. I once had the very good fortune to ride with McMurtry over that Jornada del Muerta from Los Angeles to Austin. I recognized him in the airport; we sat together on the flight and talked about the novels, the subsequent TV mini-series, and about the antiquarian book trade (McMurtry has been an antiquarian book dealer for many years, proprietor of the Washington D.C. shop Booked-Up). I must have mentioned Pound, because McMurtry then described to me how Sheri arrived at his shop in Washington one day, in a Winnebago camper, wanting to sell Pound manuscripts, letters, etc. Apparently she was rather eccentric, covered in black veils and such; and that apparition stayed with McMurtry until he reconstructed her in the character of Lady Carey, and English noblewoman in _Dead Man's Walk_. -Will Goodwin.