Ellen Olney Kirk

Ellen Warner Olney Kirk (November 6, 1842 – November 29, 1928) was an American novelist. Her novels tended to have romance plots set in New York or Philadelphia.

Early life
Kirk was born in Southington, Connecticut on November 6, 1842, the daughter of geographer and educator Jesse Olney and Elizabeth Barnes Olney. Her uncle was publisher Alfred Smith Barnes.

Career
Although Kirk wrote as a young woman, she did not publish her first novel until age 34.

Contemporary reviewers considered her work somewhat old-fashioned, especially after the turn into the twentieth century, but some were charmed by the familiar plots and the absence of overt social commentary. Her 1898 Christmas book for young readers, Dorothy Deane: A Children's Story, was illustrated by Philadelphia artist Sarah Stilwell Weber.

Personal life
Ellen Warner Olney married author, editor, and librarian John Foster Kirk in 1879, as his second wife. She was widowed when he died in 1904. She died at her home in Philadelphia on November 29, 1928, aged 86 years.

As Ellen Olney Kirk

 * His Heart's Desire (1878)
 * Sons and Daughters (1887)
 * Queen Money (1888)
 * A Daughter of Eve (1889)
 * Walford (1890)
 * Ciphers (1891)
 * The Story of Lawrence Garthe (1894)
 * Revolt of a Daughter (1897)
 * Dorothy and her Friends (1899)
 * A Remedy for Love (1902)
 * Good-bye, Proud World (1903)
 * Marcia (1907).

As Henry Hayes

 * Love in Idleness (serialized 1876-1877)
 * The Story of Margaret Kent (1886)