Cholmondeley began writing with serious intent in her teens. She wrote in her journal in 1877, "What a pleasure and interest it would be to me in life to write books. I must strike out a line of some kind, and if I do not marry (for at best that is hardly likely, as I possess neither beauty nor charms) I should want some definite occupation, besides the home duties." She placed initially some stories in
The Graphic and elsewhere. Her first novel was
The Danvers Jewels (1887), a detective story that won a small following. It appeared in the
Temple Bar magazine published by
Richard Bentley, after fellow novelist
Rhoda Broughton had introduced her to George Bentley. It was followed by
Sir Charles Danvers (1889),
Diana Tempest (1893) and
A Devotee (1897). Bentley paid £40 for
The Danvers Jewels and £50 for
Sir Charles Danvers, both in two volumes, but increased an offer of £250 for the three-volume
Diana Tempest to £400, the first of her books to appear under her name. The satirical
Red Pottage (1899) sold well both sides of the Atlantic and is still reprinted. It satirises religious hypocrisy and the narrowness of country life, but was denounced from a London pulpit as immoral. It was equally sensational when exploring "the issues of female sexuality and vocation", recurring topics in late Victorian debates about the New Women. Despite the book's great success, however, the author received little money for it later as she had sold the copyright. Later works such as
Moth and Rust (1902) and
Notwithstanding (1913) were less successful.
The Lowest Rung (1908) and
The Romance of his Life (1921) were story collections. The latter, her final book, was dedicated to the essayist and critic
Percy Lubbock. Lubbock later commemorated her in
Mary Cholmondeley: A Sketch from Memory (1928). ==Selected works==