Rummell taught
French at
Stephens College in the 1930s. In 1939, Rummell published her book
Diana: A Strange Autobiography using the pseudonym
Diana Fredericks. The autobiography details one young woman’s, Diana, discovery of her lesbian sexuality. The book ends positively, with Diana and her female partner happily together. This sympathetic and positive-portrayal of lesbianism was shocking for the time in which it was first published. The autobiography was published with a note saying, "The publishers wish it expressly understood that this is a true story, the first of its kind ever offered to the general reading public". However, Rummell's niece Jo Markwyn said in an interview that she believes
Diana: A Strange Autobiography is not purely autobiographical: "The general family background is similar, but rather than having three brothers, she had two brothers and a younger sister...I don’t think it’s an autobiography. I think it is a novel based upon her life." Rummell gave up teaching in 1940 and moved to
Beverly Hills, California to work as a non-fiction education writer, using her own name. She was a contributor to
The Rotarian,
Good Housekeeping, and
The Saturday Evening Post. In 1960, Rummell published an illustrated novel,
Aunt Jane McPhipps And Her Baby Blue Chips, written under her own name. == Personal life ==