As a senior at Vassar College, Gibbs was the editor of
Vassar Poetry, 1930, along with three other seniors who made selections from poems submitted by Vassar students. In 1932, Gibbs went on to publish her first novel,
Murder Between Drinks, a mystery fiction. Gibbs published again in 1944, along with five other writers, in
New York Murders. According to a review that appeared in The New Yorker on November 4, 1944: :"Six writers - Kurt Steel, Inspector Thomas Byrnes,
Lawrence Treat,
Baynard Kendrick, Angelica Gibbs, and Edward D. Radin - tell, for the most part not too successfully, the stories of seven unhackneyed New York State crimes. Mr. Steel's narration of the Walton-Matthews case in 1860, the Byrnes notes on the Ryan murders in 1873, and Miss Gibb's reconstruction of the Wilkins affair in 1919 are fine stuff for the fanciers of the
Edmund Pearson school of necrology. The rest of the pieces seem tricked or prettied up for the detective-magagzine trade." ==
The Test ==