Her Life in Ink: Elizabeth Jordan, Journalist, Editor, and Mystery Author
Unravel the intriguing life of a woman who edited the literary greats of her day and forged the path to the golden age of mystery writing.
Elizabeth Garver Jordan was renowned not only for her own writing but also for her influence in journalism and literature. Her love of intrigue started when she was five and made a secret pact with the family cook, who taught her to read. In her first career as a journalist, Jordan climbed the ranks from columnist to editor of Pulitzer’s prestigious New YorkWorld Sunday edition, where her work as an investigative journalist took her from the Bowery to the mansions of Fifth Avenue. She specialized in covering murder trials, including that of the notorious Lizzie Borden. But while the Borden trial made Jordan famous, it also led to a scandal that would follow her throughout her life.
As editor for Harper’s Bazar, Jordan changed the magazine into the glossy fashion publication for which it remains famous today. She also emphasized fiction, bringing Jack London, Stephen Crane, Henry James, and many suffragists to its pages. When she moved to Harper books as literary editor, she was instrumental to the successful careers of writers such as Sinclair Lewis, Dorothy Canfield Fisher, and Fannie Hurst.
But perhaps the most surprising influence Jordan wielded was in the field of mystery writing, as an author herself. Although erased from histories of the genre until now, she was one of the premier American mystery writers of the early twentieth century. Like Agatha Christie, Jordan’s mysteries were high-quality, innovative stories—ranging from locked rooms to country estates to gothic settings—that helped reshape the genre. Here, for the first time, the full story of her life—including her close relationship with Frances Hodgson Burnett—is finally revealed.

1147495550
Her Life in Ink: Elizabeth Jordan, Journalist, Editor, and Mystery Author
Unravel the intriguing life of a woman who edited the literary greats of her day and forged the path to the golden age of mystery writing.
Elizabeth Garver Jordan was renowned not only for her own writing but also for her influence in journalism and literature. Her love of intrigue started when she was five and made a secret pact with the family cook, who taught her to read. In her first career as a journalist, Jordan climbed the ranks from columnist to editor of Pulitzer’s prestigious New YorkWorld Sunday edition, where her work as an investigative journalist took her from the Bowery to the mansions of Fifth Avenue. She specialized in covering murder trials, including that of the notorious Lizzie Borden. But while the Borden trial made Jordan famous, it also led to a scandal that would follow her throughout her life.
As editor for Harper’s Bazar, Jordan changed the magazine into the glossy fashion publication for which it remains famous today. She also emphasized fiction, bringing Jack London, Stephen Crane, Henry James, and many suffragists to its pages. When she moved to Harper books as literary editor, she was instrumental to the successful careers of writers such as Sinclair Lewis, Dorothy Canfield Fisher, and Fannie Hurst.
But perhaps the most surprising influence Jordan wielded was in the field of mystery writing, as an author herself. Although erased from histories of the genre until now, she was one of the premier American mystery writers of the early twentieth century. Like Agatha Christie, Jordan’s mysteries were high-quality, innovative stories—ranging from locked rooms to country estates to gothic settings—that helped reshape the genre. Here, for the first time, the full story of her life—including her close relationship with Frances Hodgson Burnett—is finally revealed.

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Her Life in Ink: Elizabeth Jordan, Journalist, Editor, and Mystery Author

Her Life in Ink: Elizabeth Jordan, Journalist, Editor, and Mystery Author

by Sharon M. Harris
Her Life in Ink: Elizabeth Jordan, Journalist, Editor, and Mystery Author

Her Life in Ink: Elizabeth Jordan, Journalist, Editor, and Mystery Author

by Sharon M. Harris

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Overview

Unravel the intriguing life of a woman who edited the literary greats of her day and forged the path to the golden age of mystery writing.
Elizabeth Garver Jordan was renowned not only for her own writing but also for her influence in journalism and literature. Her love of intrigue started when she was five and made a secret pact with the family cook, who taught her to read. In her first career as a journalist, Jordan climbed the ranks from columnist to editor of Pulitzer’s prestigious New YorkWorld Sunday edition, where her work as an investigative journalist took her from the Bowery to the mansions of Fifth Avenue. She specialized in covering murder trials, including that of the notorious Lizzie Borden. But while the Borden trial made Jordan famous, it also led to a scandal that would follow her throughout her life.
As editor for Harper’s Bazar, Jordan changed the magazine into the glossy fashion publication for which it remains famous today. She also emphasized fiction, bringing Jack London, Stephen Crane, Henry James, and many suffragists to its pages. When she moved to Harper books as literary editor, she was instrumental to the successful careers of writers such as Sinclair Lewis, Dorothy Canfield Fisher, and Fannie Hurst.
But perhaps the most surprising influence Jordan wielded was in the field of mystery writing, as an author herself. Although erased from histories of the genre until now, she was one of the premier American mystery writers of the early twentieth century. Like Agatha Christie, Jordan’s mysteries were high-quality, innovative stories—ranging from locked rooms to country estates to gothic settings—that helped reshape the genre. Here, for the first time, the full story of her life—including her close relationship with Frances Hodgson Burnett—is finally revealed.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781493092161
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
Publication date: 02/03/2026
Pages: 240
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.00(d)

About the Author

Sharon M. Harris is professor emerita of English at the University of Connecticut. She is the author of Dr. Mary Walker: An American Radical, Rebecca Harding Davis: A Life Among Writers, and A Feminist Reader: Feminist Thought from Sappho to Satrapi. She lives in Washington State.

Table of Contents

Preface

Chapter 1. Life in Milwaukee

Chapter 2. The Plan

Chapter 3. A New Kind of Education

Chapter 4. Making Her Way

Chapter 5. True Stories

Chapter 6. Sections Editor

Chapter 7. Covering the Lizzie Borden Trial

Chapter 8. Assistant Editor

Chapter 9. Transitioning

Chapter 10. Harper’s Bazar

Chapter 11. Fashioning Literature

Chapter 12. Editor and Author

Chapter 13. Retreats

Chapter 14. The Whole Darn Family

Chapter 15. The Progressive Era

Chapter 16. Harper’s Publishing

Chapter 17. A Second Composite Novel

Chapter 18. New Directions

Chapter 19. Goldwyn Pictures

Chapter 20. Mystery Writing

Chapter 21. The Roaring Twenties

Chapter 22. America’s Theater Critic

Chapter 23. Rebuilding from Loss

Chapter 24. New Directions

Chapter 25. Writing Against the Odds

Chapter 26. Three Rousing Cheers!

Chapter 27. Passages

Chapter 28. The Final Years

Bibliography

Index

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