Her first book, the brief, epigrammatic
Some Emotions and a Moral, was published in 1891 in
T. Fisher Unwin's Pseudonym Library. With its accounts of unhappy marriage and infidelity, it was an immediate hit. Following it were similarly bohemian novels like
''The Sinner's Comedy (1892),
A Study in Temptations (1893),
A Bundle of Life (1894), and The Gods, Some Mortals, and Lord Wickenham
. The Herb Moon
(1896), a country love story, was followed by The School for Saints
(1897), with a sequel, Robert Orange'' (1900). Her novels were ridiculed in a contemporary verse: :John Oliver Hobbes, :with your spasms and throbs, :How does your novel grow? :With cynical sneers :at young Love and his tears, :And epigrams all in a row. (1901)|alt=Later books are
The Serious Wooing (1901),
Love and the Soul Hunters (1902),
Tales about Temperament (1902), and
The Vineyard (1904). From 1900, Richards lived and worked at her villa near her parents' home at St Lawrence,
Isle of Wight. The villa, now called Craigie Lodge, bears a small commemorative plaque memorializing Richards's time there. An account of her friendship with Father (later Bishop) William Brown, based on volumes of their correspondence, was published by M. F. Brown as
The Priest and the Playwright (Pen Press, 2009). ==Death==