Emilie Loring


Emilie Baker Loring was an American romance novelist of the 20th century. She began writing in 1914 at the age of 50 and continued until her death after a long illness in 1951. After her death, her estate was managed by her sons, Selden M. and Robert M. Loring, who, based on a wealth of unfinished material they discovered, published twenty more books under her name until 1972. These books were ghost-written by Elinore Denniston.

Personal life

Emilie Loring was born in Boston, Massachusetts in 1866 to George M. Baker and Emily Frances Baker. Her father was a playwright and publisher and her mother was a homemaker. Loring married Victor J. Loring, who was a lawyer. She died in Wellesley, Massachusetts on March 13, 1951. At the time of her death, Loring had sold more than a million copies of her first thirty books.
Loring's sister, Rachel Baker Gale, wrote a number of suffrage parlor plays.
Loring's son, Selden M. Loring was also an author. He wrote Young Buckskin Spy and Mighty Magic: An Almost-True Story of Pirates and Indians.
The papers of Emilie Loring are housed in the Department of Special Collections, Boston University, Mugar Memorial Library.

Works

The majority of Loring's books are highly romantic mysteries that focus on a young, independent woman with courage and ideals who finds herself in a tricky situation, relies on the help of a strong, handsome man and ends up with him at the end of the story. Beyond romance and mystery, her books also explore a selection of topics including marriage, love, the work ethic, American patriotism, freedom and optimism.
She enjoyed painting pictures with words, often describing the environment, architecture, dress, food and physical features of characters in exacting and colorful detail. In the books published after she died, a lot of the colorful description was left out. Another major difference in the books published before and after the author's death is the characters' language, a change for the better. In a lot of the early books, too many of the characters use American slang, which sounds like it came straight from the early talkies.
Loring's work features several repeating motifs; among them are a heroine in her early '20s with dark hair, a dark-haired lawyer or aspiring politician for a hero, a secondary male predisposed to speaking in quotations, a "sleek" bad guy, a wise older woman who may or may not end up with a wise older man who has long been in love with her, a flirtatious blond woman vying for the hero and New England as a setting or character trait: "New England granite." Often-used plot devices in her novels include an orphaned character, a marriage of convenience or contract, a clandestine marriage and trouble coming from outside a well-knit social structure.
Her book Beyond the Sound of Guns is referenced nine times in America’s Popular Sayings: Over 1600 Expressions on Topics from Beauty to Money and Everything In Between by Gregory Titelman, citing phrases that turn out to be quotes or paraphrases from someone else.

List of published works

As Emilie Loring

Books ''(alphabetical by title)''

Books

Her earlier books, published from 1922 to 1937, were originally published in hardcover by William Penn & Company in Philadelphia.
Her books from 1938 to 1950 were originally published by Little, Brown and Company, as were all of her posthumous works.
All thirty of her novels written during her lifetime were reprinted by Grosset in 1961.
Later all of her works were reprinted in mass market paperback editions by the romance division of Bantam Books.
As late as 2005, Thorndike Press, an imprint of Thomson Gale, was reprinting select titles in large-print format, although their website did not show them in their 2007 catalog.
Little, Brown and Company owns the copyright on books dated to 1954. Emilie Loring’s sons, Robert and Selden, are listed as "Child of the author" in searchable copyright renewal records.
Selden was listed first in the copyright information from 1955 to 1960. From 1962 to 1971, Robert is listed first in the copyright information. In the 1972 novel The Shining Years, only Robert is listed as the copyright owner as the Executor of the Estate of Emilie Baker Loring.

Books, articles, and other references to Emilie Loring