On Tragett's 1925 novel, Soames Green, a chronicle of a country solicitor's family, the Sheffield Daily Telegraph's reviewer said: 'Miss Larminie is undoubtedly a Master - or should it be Mistress - of language,' although they did not consider the plot to match her skill.
[5] Tragett's 1928 novel Galatea was about the consequences of a woman named Emmeline winning an enormous amount of money in a sweepstakes, which Country Life described as ' a really distinguished and utterly charming story.
'[6] The Sketch's reviewer Alan Kemp also found Galatea agreeable but described Tragett as a 'workmanlike' novelist.
[7] Tragett's 1933 novel Doctor Sam, about a man who marries a widowed mother and becomes a good stepfather, was reviewed positively in the Western Mail: 'Miss Larminie scorns affectation and, therefore, writes with superlative ease.
[9] 1918: [with Vera Larminie]: Out of the East: And Other Poems: Adventurers All: A Series of Young Poets Unknown to Fame [no.