While Nina Gabrilowitsch's diaries located at Brigham Young University are a key part of Nina and her family's life story -- a much more complete picture emerges when the archive of Nina's personal letters and photographs and home movies currently held by the Mark Twain House in Hartford are studied. Since publication of _The Twain Shall Meet_ and Taylor Roberts's very comprehensive review, new material not included in the book has come to light. This includes the identity of the person who donated Nina's diaries to Brigham Young and how this person and her family were connected to Nina. This also includes the identify of at least one man Nina hoped to marry not long before her death. In addition, the location and contents of yet another diary, not at Brigham Young, and once owned by Nina's lawyer and heir to her estate has been established. While this story is not yet complete, what it does yield thus far for Twain scholars is an insight into the family dynamics in which Clara Clemens grew up and in which her own daughter was raised. It is an intriguing human interest story and one in which today's Mark Twain scholars have the benefit of seeing played out as puzzle pieces come together. Barb