thumb|Tracy's novel Sylvia's Search was cover-featured on the April 1914 issue of [[Adventure (magazine)|Adventure]]
Louis Tracy (18 March 1863 - 13 August 1928) (born Patrick Joseph Treacy) was a British journalist, and prolific writer of fiction. He used the pseudonyms Gordon Holmes and Robert Fraser, which were at times shared with the writer M. P. Shiel, with whom he collaborated until 1911.
His fiction included mystery, adventure and romance.
Life
He was born in Liverpool to a well-to-do middle-class family. At first he was educated at home and then at the French Seminary at Douai. Around 1884 he became a reporter for a local paper, The Northern Echo at Darlington, circulating in parts of Durham and North Yorkshire; later he worked for papers in Cardiff and Allahabad. During 1892–1894 he was closely associated with Arthur Harmsworth, in The Sun and The Evening News and Post.
During WWI he travelled to the USA and gave lectures on the war; after the war, he worked with the British Foreign Office and later for the Times newspaper.
Published works
Tracy’s works include;
- The Final War: A Story of the Great Betrayed (1896)
- An American Emperor: The Story of the Fourth Empire of France (1897)
- Captain of the Kansas (1907)
- The Postmaster’s Daughter (1916)
- The Bartlett Mystery (1919)
- The House ‘round the Corner
