Journalism After marrying at the age of 18, Lorraine worked in the 1920s as a reporter for the
San Francisco Examiner, and later for other west coast papers. During World War II she wrote for the
San Antonio Evening News. Other stories by Lorraine included "Into the 28th Century" (
Science and Wonder, 1929), a time-travel story featuring artificial wombs,
eugenics, inhaled nutrition,
hovercraft, and a woman as President of the United States in 1955; "The Jovian Jest" (
Astounding Stories, 1930), "The Celestial Visitor" (
Wonder Stories, 1935), "The Isle of Madness" (
Wonder Stories, 1935), "Books Hold That Line" (1935), "Entropy" (
Orb, 1952), and "Ancestors" (
The Avalonian, 1952). She published several collections of her poetry in the 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s. In the 1940s she was billed as the "founder-director of the Avalon National Poetry Shrine", later known as the Avalon World Arts Academy. In connection with Avalon, she wrote a textbook,
Character against Chaos (1947). Her
Wine of Wonder (1951) was billed as the first volume of science fiction poetry.
Pseudonyms There may be some poetry (and possibly fiction) of Lorraine's that was published under unknown pseudonyms, which Lorraine refused to divulge. "Three of my pen-names are masculine," she explained to a reporter in 1965, "and if the editors and publishers knew I was a woman they wouldn't pay me more than half what they do now." By the time of this quote, Lorraine was exclusively a writer of poetry, saying of editors that "whenever they see a woman's name on a piece of verse, they immediately think it will be too sentimental or mushy. They would consider the same verse strong and dynamic under a man's name." ==Personal life==