In 1936, under the name Harriette Simpson, she published her first novel,
Mountain Path. While clearly drawing inspiration from her experiences as a teacher in Appalachia, Arnow pushed back against suggestions that the protagonist of the novel, Louisa Sheridan, was herself. Under the instructions of her publisher, Simpson added sensational "Appalachian" stereotypical elements (
moonshining,
feuds) to her original work, a much more sedate series of sketches. From 1934 to 1939 she lived in Cincinnati and worked for the Federal Writer's Project of the WPA where she met her future husband, Harold B. Arnow, the son of Jewish immigrants, in 1939. They lived briefly in Pulaski County, Harriette again working as a teacher, before settling in a public housing complex in
Detroit, Michigan in 1944. Now billing herself as Harriette Arnow, her 1949 novel, ''
Hunter's Horn'', Of her writing she said, "I am afflicted with too many words ... Like the characters in my books, I talk too much and tell things I shouldn't tell."
Michigan State University Press brought out her previously unpublished second novel,
Between the Flowers, in 1999, and
The Collected Short Stories of Harriette Simpson Arnow in 2005. == Continuing influence ==