In November 1889, the
New York World announced that it was sending its reporter
Nellie Bly around the world, in a bid to beat
Phileas Fogg's fictitious 80-day journey in
Jules Verne's novel
Around the World in Eighty Days. Catching wind of this publicity stunt,
John Brisben Walker, who had just purchased the three-year-old and still-fledgling
Cosmopolitan, decided to dispatch Bisland on her own journey. Ultimately, however, Bly triumphed over Bisland. Critically, while in England, Bisland was told (and apparently believed) she had missed her intended ride, the swift German steamer
Ems leaving from
Southampton, even though her publisher had bribed the shipping company to delay its departure. It is unknown whether she was intentionally deceived. She was thus forced to catch the slow-going
Bothnia on January 18, departing from
Queenstown (now Cobh), Ireland, ensuring that Bly would prevail. Bisland's ship did not arrive in Manhattan until January 30. She completed her trip in 76 days, well ahead of Fogg's fictional record but slower than Bly's 72 days. Bisland wrote a series of articles for the
Cosmopolitan on her journey, subsequently published as a book entitled,
In Seven Stages: A Flying Trip Around The World (1891). ==Later career==