In 1954, Clark launched
FEM magazine, a publication that was directed toward women, with a focus on African Americans. Clark said then that besides being informative for readers, she wanted the publication to make potential advertisers aware of the multi-million-dollar purchasing potential of African American women. Clark wrote for the
Chester Times and worked in the West Coast bureau of the
Pittsburgh Courier. She later wrote about food and social issues for the
Los Angeles Sentinel for 50 years. Her column, "Food For Thought," which injected political awareness into food articles for a grass roots audience, was syndicated in 150 newspapers She also edited and co-wrote the
Black Family Reunion Cookbook, which sold more than 250,000 copies and made best-seller lists in 1991. Clark also applied her journalistic skills to public relations when she became the first African-American with a business license to own a public relations firm, Libby Clark Associates, in California; she went on to operate the firm for 50 years. (
Leather Jacket, ''Killer's Grave
and The Degenerate''), author, photographer, and photojournalist William Karl Thomas (born January 25, 1933 in
Bay St. Louis, Mississippi), who, in 2011, published a novel titled “Cleo,” based on his ten-year professional association with Miss Libby Clark during the 1950s and 1960s. In it he describes her personal friendships with famous personalities
Lena Horne,
Dorothy Dandridge,
James Baldwin,
Tom Bradley,
Leo Branton, and others. He also includes excerpts from her 1960 coverage of the Nigerian Independence in Africa with excerpts from her interviews with
Golda Meir,
Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, and Princess Alexandra from England. Thomas’ publisher's website includes a sampling of his photography with photos of Libby Clark. ==Recognition==