After her divorce in 1914, Tietjens was a
World War I correspondent for the
Chicago Daily News in France, in 1917 and 1918. Her poems had already begun to be published in
Poetry: A Magazine of Verse, the noted poetry magazine, around 1913. She later became publisher
Harriet Monroe's associate editor there for more than twenty-five years. Tietjens was considered a more patient and generous editor, whose style contrasted sharply with that of Monroe, who was not known to treat would-be contributors with "kid gloves". One collection of stories,
Burton Holmes Travel Stories: Japan, Korea and Formosa (1924) contains lively descriptions of East Asian countries. By contemporary standards, the stories seem provincial and quaintly Eurocentric. The stories contain descriptions of nationalities and ethnicities that can be understood to be racist. Here's an excerpt: Tietjens was also a contributing editor for the ''
Compton's Encyclopedia''. ==Personal life==