She wrote novels and short stories, and much of her early work focused on community life in the suburbs.
[2] In the last years of her life, she wrote non-fiction articles for various publications, and was a staff writer at the Reader's Digest.
[2] Her second novel was published a year later, titled The Pride of the Town,[4] and it satirized young, suburban married couples.
[9] In an interview, Walworth commented that the idea for the story and some of the details were based on her own experiences—such as how the married couple in the novel made an agreement to never say the names of their former spouses—but that many of the incidents in the book were fictional.
[10] From 1937 to 1938, Walworth was the dean of curriculum in the English Literature department at Briarcliff Junior College in New York.
[13] Later that year, Hodder and Stoughton bought the book's British publishing rights.
[1] Around 1950, Walworth was in the process of writing a book set in Alaska, titled The Love of Eva McGown.