Mary Watts's first published pieces were three short stories for ''McClure's Magazine'': "The Gate of the Seven Hundred Virgins" (May 1907), "The Great North Road" (August 1907) and "The Voodoo-Woman" (December 1907). Mrs. Watt's first book
The Tenants: An Episode of the Eighties was then published by McClure Publishing Company in March 1908. She published another short story for ''McClure's Magazine'' in February 1909: "Camilla's Marriage." In April 1910, Mary Stanbery Watts's most acclaimed novel,
Nathan Burke, an
historical novel of the
Mexican War, was published by Macmillan Company, which would publish a dozen more novels by Mary Watts. Her second novel was
The Legacy: The Story of a Woman in May 1911, followed by
Van Cleve in September 1913, set in the time of the
Spanish-American War. Then came
The Rise of Jennie Cushing in October 1914. This book was made into a
silent film by the famous French silent-film director
Maurice Tourneur. This may have been one of the first novels for which movie rights were sold. From 1916 to 1924, Mary S. Watts would publish a novel every year except 1921:
The Rudder: A Novel With Several Heroes (March 1916);
Three Short Plays. (January 1917);
The Boardman Family (April 1918);
From Father to Son (June 1919);
The Noon-Mark (October 1920);
The House of Rimmon (February 1922);
Luther Nichols (January 1923) and
The Fabric of the Loom (October 1924). Her last four published pieces, written for ''Harper's Magazine,'' were short stories: "The Toiling Masses" (December 1922); "Points of View" (September 1923); "Nice Neighbors" (December 1923) and "White Men" (February 1926). ==References==