Lilian C. Garis, born Lilian C. McNamara (20 October 1873 – 19 April 1954), was an American author who wrote hundreds of books of juvenile fiction between around 1915 and the early 1940s.[1] Prior to this, she was the first female reporter for the Newark Evening News in New Jersey.[2] Garis and her husband, Howard R. Garis, were possibly the most prolific children's authors of the early 20th century.
Biography
Lilian McNamara was born in 1872 in Cleveland, Ohio.[1] Her parents were Irish immigrants Edward[3] and Winifred.[1][4] Lillian wrote her own "Woman's Page" for a city paper as a teenager.[1] She attended private schools including Dunkirk Union School.[5] In 1893 her poem "Peace" was featured in the New Jersey Scrapbook of Women Writers created for the World's Columbian Exposition.[6] At this point she uses an alternate name "Lillian Mack" and lives in Newark.[6]
Lilian was in charge of "Woman's Work" in the Newark Evening News from 1895 to 1900 and was known as "Miss Mack" or "Lilian Mack".[7][8][9] Lillian was also a suffragette.[1]
Lilian Garis is one of the writers who always wrote, She expressed herself in verse from early school days and it was then predicted that Lilian Mack would one day become a writer. Justifying this sentiment, while still in high school, she took charge of the woman's page for a city paper and her work there attracted such favorable attention that she left school to take entire charge of woman's work for the largest daily in an important Eastern city.
Among her 'fan' letters Lillian Garis receives some flattering testimonials of her girl readers' interest in her stories. From a class of thirty comes a vote of twenty-five naming her as their favorite author/ Perhaps in is the element of live mystery that Mrs. Garis always builds her stories upon, or perhaps it is because the girls easily can translate her own sincere interest in themselves from the stories. At any rate, her books prosper through the changing conditions of these times, giving pleasure, satisfaction, and, incidentally, that tactful word of inspiration, so important in literature for young girls. Mrs. Garis prefers to call her books 'juvenile novels' and in them romance is never lacking.
Originally printed by Milton Bradley, then by Grosset & Dunlap and Whitman.
Nancy Brandon, Enthusiast (Milton Bradley's original title; renamed Nancy Brandon by Grosset & Dunlap)
Nancy Brandon's Mystery
Barbara Hale set
Barbara Hale (subtitled Barbara Hale: A Doctor's Daughter)
Barbara Hale's Mystery Friend (subtitled, then later completely retitled, as "[or,] Barbara Hale and Cozette")
Ted set
A Girl Named Ted
Ted and Tony
Cleo set
Cleo's Conquest
Cleo's Misty Rainbow
Connie Loring set
Connie Loring's Dilemma (retitled later)
Connie Loring's Ambition (retitled later)
Judy Jordon set
Judy Jordon
Judy Jordon's Discovery
Sally set
Sally for Short
Sally Found Out
Gloria set
Gloria at Boarding School
Gloria: A Girl and Her Dad
Joan set
Joan: Just a Girl
Joan's Garden of Adventure
Melody Lane series
Two versions were printed of the first six books, one with cover art by Ruth King and one by Pelagie Doane (best known for her work on the Judy Bolton series). The series follows Carol Duncan and her sister and friends as they solve mysteries around Melody Lane. The events they encounter are standard series book fare of the time period; and are often criticized for their dated writing style and slow moving plots.
The Ghost of Melody Lane (1933)
The Forbidden Trail (1933)
The Tower Secret (1934)
The Wild Warning (1934)
Terror at Moaning Cliff (1935)
The Dragon Of The Hills (1936)
The Mystery Of Stingman's Alley (1938)
The Secret of the Kashmir Shawl (1939)
The Hermit of Proud Hill (1940)
The Clue of the Crooked Key Listed as the next title in the series in "The Hermit of Proud Hill". Never published and unknown if this book was ever written.
The Riverton Mystery
The Riverton Mystery (1944) The unreleased manuscript was never published until 2023, after the New York Public Library gave permission for its release.[16]
^Grimes, William. "Down the Halls of a Wonder House, the Mirrors Cracked", The New York Times, July 18, 2007. Accessed November 6, 2007. "They made a mighty team: Howard and Lilian Garis, who met as journalists in the early years of the century, turned out hundreds of Tom Swift and Bobbsey Twins titles for the Stratemeyer syndicate before Howard struck it rich with Uncle Wiggily."
^"Dorothy Dale". Edward Stratemeyer & the Stratemeyer Syndicate. Retrieved 2022-01-07.