There is one brief moment of a conversation among Gorky and Twain that is told in _Footloose in Arcadia: A Personal Record of Jack London, George Sterling, and Ambrose Bierce_ by Joseph Noel, (Carrick & Evans, 1940), pp. 167-175. Noel writes of London: ~~~~~ When I returned to California after the earthquake and fire in 1906, he [London] learned that I had met Maxim Gorky in New York, and called on me to find out what I thought of the Russian voice of the disinherited. Almost at the outset he asked if Gorky had mentioned him. Since the Russian writer had, I didn't hesitate to tell him so. He was as pleased as a boy who had just made the seventh grade. While Gorky thought extremely well of Jack, H. G. Wells, the English novelist, didn't show much enthusiasm. Mark Twain, at this same gathering, said: "It would serve this man London right to have the working class get control of things. He would have to call out the militia to collect his royalties." When the interview with Gorky was published in the San Francisco News Letter, my only reference to Mr. Wells and Mark Twain was to mention their presence at the reception, for I had intended to write another article dealing with them. The editor saw fit to cut out all that Gorky said of Jack London. I never was able to learn why. Personally I thought it good as news, even if it failed somewhat as literary criticism. ~~~~~ The entire interview with Gorky including the deleted portion regarding London is reprinted in this same chapter. Barb