Dana left the ministry and turned to journalism. He worked for the New York Herald, then in 1896 he was the editor of The Hungarian-American magazine. He moved to London, where he edited the satirical magazine Judy from 1897 to 1900 and wrote poems and articles for The Pall Mall Gazette.[3] His first novel, The Woman of Orchids, was published in 1901. He returned to New York to work at another magazine, The Smart Set, first as an assistant editor, then as editor from 1902 to 1904.[4]
Dana married his cousin Gertrude M. Hill in July 1894.[5] They divorced in 1905. Dana married Florence Mabel Elliot in September 1911.[2] Dana died in New York City on April 3, 1926.
Works
Dana's writings included non-fiction, poetry, and novels.[6][7]
Fiction and poetry
Mater Christi and Other Poems (1890)
The Woman of Orchids (1901)
A Puritan Witch (1903)
The Master Mind (1913), based on a play by Daniel D. Carter
The Shooting of Dan McGrew (1915), based on a poem by Robert W. Service
Within the Law (1913), based on a play by Bayard Veiller
The Lake Mystery (1923)
The Mystery of the Third Parrot (1924)
Non-fiction
A Perfect Memory: How to Have and Keep It (1917)
How to Train Your Mind: A Practical Method for the Development of Mental Power (1918)
Military Pyrotechnics (1919), co-authored with Henry B. Faber
Spelling Made Easy (1919)
Shorthand Made Easy (1919)
Grammar Made Easy (1919)
Arithmetic Made Easy (1919)
Law at a Glance (1920)
The American Encyclopedia of Etiquette and Culture (1922)
^ abcWiley, Edgar J. (1917). Catalogue of Officers and Students of Middlebury College in Middlebury, Vermont: And of Others who Have Received Degrees, 1800-1915. Middlebury, Vermont: Middlebury College. p. 280.
^"Writers of the Day". The Writer. Vol. 14, no. 3. March 1901. pp. 40–41.
^Mott, Frank Luther (1968). A History of American Magazines, 1905-1930, Volume 5. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. pp. 246, 248. OCLC299665151.