Juliet Wilbor Tompkins (May 13, 1871 – January 29, 1956) was an American writer and editor.
[3] According to Richard Ohmann, Tompkins's story "On the Way North", published in Munsey's in 1895, exemplifies the perspective of the professional–managerial class.
[5] A review in the Brooklyn Eagle called the novel Open House (1909), about a psychiatrist who runs a facility to which he invites "derelicts", a "very laughable, perverse book".
[7] Tompkins married Emery Pottle either in 1897[1] or on November 22, 1904,[8] and filed for divorce on March 24, 1905.
This article about a novelist of the United States born in the 1870s is a stub.