Ada Snell's short stories reflect a Louisiana setting, particularly the multicultural Cane River country of her native Natchitoches Parish. Snell's works began about 1917 and peaked in the middle 1920s. "The Joyous Coast" was published in Southern Women's Magazine in 1917. In 1925, Snell wrote the acclaimed "Redbone", carried in Southern Stories by A. Turner. In 1926, she published "The Raspberry Dress" in The Century, a story of a complex relationship between a grandmother and her granddaughter. Carver's best stories feature older women. She had a French grandmother who encouraged her intellectual growth and literary imagination. Three other works in 1926, "Treeshy", "The Old One", and "Maudie" were published by Harper's Magazine. Also in 1926, she wrote "The Cajun", a bigoted play portraying Cajuns. Caroline Dormon wrote a tribute to Snell in the Minden Signal Tribune, noting that despite her relative inexperience as an author Snell had won prizes over older, established writers. In 1927, Snell penned "Bagatelle". After 1928, her work slowed considerably. A children's play, "The Clock Strikes Tomorrow", was written and produced in 1935. Another short story, "For Suellen with Love", appeared in a college review in 1949. The Collected Works of Ada Jack Carver appeared posthumously in 1980. Snell was an occasional guest at Cammie G. Henry's popular Melrose Plantation in Natchitoches Parish, where she met the authors Francois Mignon and Lyle Saxon, a native of Washington state who wrote extensively on New Orleans culture. Five theses or dissertations have been written about Ada Snell. In 1930, A. Dodson wrote a thesis entitled "Ada Jack Carver". In 1931, M.I. Bowman wrote the thesis, "The Negro in the Works of Three Contemporary Louisiana Writers", including Snell. In 1975, O. L. Ford wrote the dissertation, "Ada Jack Carver: A Critical Biography." In 1986, Mildred Acres Houston submitted her master's thesis at Northwestern State University in Natchitoches entitled, "The Shadow of Africa on the Cane: An examination of Africanisms in the Fiction of Lyle Saxon and Ada Jack Carver." In 1994, D. M. W. Taylor wrote the dissertation, "Louisiana's Literary Legacy: A Critical Appraisal of the Writings of Ada Jack Carver".
Death
John Hampton Snell, the Snells' first child, died in a household accident at the age of two, only two days before the birth of his brother, David Snell. After graduation from Minden High School and Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, David Snell became a journalist and cartoonist for Life Magazine and several other national publications. John and Ada Snell are interred beside "Our Little Son John Hampton Snell", the inscription on the child's grave marker at the old section of Minden Cemetery. All of Ada's personal papers are believed to have been destroyed at her death upon her request. It is unknown if any manuscripts were pending. Numerous unresolved mysteries cloud the connection between her personal life and her literary output. She was a widow for the last thirteen years of her life. She apparently wrote nothing for four years after the time of John Hampton's death and David's birth. Her death occurred in the same month, December 1972, as the closing of Life Magazine, her son's principal employer.