Benson began her career selling short stories to magazines such as
St. Nicholas and
Lutheran Young Folks. During her college years, she worked at
The Daily Iowan under editor
George Gallup, and after receiving her undergraduate degree, for the society pages of the
Clinton Herald. In addition to her work with the
Stratemeyer Syndicate, Benson wrote many other series both in her name and under other pseudonyms from the 1930s to the 1950s. She ultimately wrote under a dozen names and published more than 130 books. In 1930 and 1931, Benson wrote the Ruth Darrow series. Taking flying lessons and flying her own aircraft, Ruth wins a national cross-country race, lands on an
aircraft carrier, helps the
Forest Service in fighting forest fires, and alerts the
Coast Guard of an immigrant-smuggling scheme. The series has been highlighted as unusual for its time, for both its generally authentic aeronautical lore, and the consistent and outspoken advocacy of women's abilities and mechanical competence. From 1939 to 1947, Benson wrote the
Penny Parker books, which were published under her own name. Parker was the daughter of a newspaper editor who sought to become a reporter herself, often becoming involved in mysteries and dangerous situations. Parker was modeled after both the Nancy Drew character and Benson herself, but Benson had creative control of the character and her stories that she did not have for the Nancy Drew series. Benson would later cite Parker as her favorite of the characters she wrote, and considered her to be "a better Nancy Drew than Nancy is." Benson began working at the
Toledo Blade in 1944, and continued there for 58 years. After the death of her second husband in 1959, Benson focused on journalism. In the 1990s, she began writing a weekly column for the
Toledo Blade titled "On the Go". She continued this and writing
obituaries full-time until a few months before her death. Under the pseudonym of
Alice B. Emerson, Benson wrote
Ruth Fielding and Her Great Scenario. the equivalent of three months' pay for a newspaper reporter at that time. Ghostwriters signed away all rights to their texts and any claim to the Syndicate pseudonym used. Writers were, however, permitted to reveal that they wrote for the Syndicate. The Syndicate protected their pseudonyms to preserve series continuity as contributors to the series came and went. In 1929, Stratemeyer developed a new series of detective novels with Benson in mind as the ghostwriter. He initially named the heroine Stella Strong, though upon selling the series to Grosset & Dunlap, they chose the alternative name Nan Drew and lengthened the name to
Nancy Drew. While Stratemeyer supplied the outlines of the first four novels for Benson, she developed Nancy's spunky, plucky personality, and her daring, adventurous spirit. Benson sought to make the heroine an unusually liberated woman for her time. She later said about writing the initial books, "I always knew the series would be successful. I just never expected it to be the blockbuster that it has been. I'm glad that I had that much influence on people." Stratemeyer's daughters,
Harriet Adams and Edna Stratemeyer, attempted to sell the company as per his wishes, but were unable to find a buyer due to the
Great Depression. They ultimately continued their father's work, and kept correspondence with Benson. Though Benson briefly quit the Nancy Drew series, she continued writing the Fielding books until the series was cancelled by its publisher in 1934. Upon returning to the Nancy Drew series in 1934, Adams and Stratemeyer convinced her to also write the
Kay Tracey and
Dana Girls series they had developed. The Dana Girls, which also used the Carolyn Keene pseudonym, had been written by
The Hardy Boys ghostwriter
Leslie McFarlane until he quit following the initial four books. Benson continued writing for the Syndicate until the early 1950s, when the Syndicate underwent management changes. Beginning in 1959, Adams revised and updated the Nancy Drew books written by Benson. Adams also made changes to Nancy's personality that had been crafted by Benson, making her less assertive and spunky. In 1980, Grosset & Dunlap called Benson as a witness during a lawsuit against the Syndicate for contracting new titles with their competitor
Simon & Schuster. Benson's testimony revealed her identity to the public as a contributor to the Nancy Drew mystery stories. After the death of her sister in 1973, Adams claimed she had written the series since her father's passing; she had received considerable publicity for this especially since both The Hardy Boys and Nancy Drew were
adapted for television in the late 1970s. Since the revelation and subsequent research into Syndicate files, Benson has been acknowledged the creator of the original Nancy Drew along with Edward Stratemeyer. In 2001, Benson received a Special
Edgar Award from the
Mystery Writers of America for her contributions to the Nancy Drew series. Benson's favorite Nancy Drew story was
The Hidden Staircase, the second mystery in the series. Whenever asked, she would gladly autograph copies of the Nancy Drew books, but only the titles she actually wrote. ==Personal life==