Page:A book of the west; being an introduction to Devon and Cornwall.djvu/488

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

28 Messrs. Methuen's Catalogue Jane H. FlNDLATER. Fourth Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s. ' A powerful and vivid story.' — Standard. ' A beautiful story, sad and strange as truth itself.' — Vanity Fair. 'A very charming and pathetic tale.' — Pall Mall Gazette. _ ' A singularly original, clever, and beautiful story.' — Guardian. ' Reveals to us a new writer of undoubted faculty and reserve force.' — Spectator. 'An exquisite idyll, delicate, affecting, and beautiful.' — Black and White. J. H. Findlater. A DAUGHTER OF STRIFE. By Jane Helen Findlater. Croiun 8vo. 6s. ' A story of strong human interest." — Scots- man. ' Her thought has solidity and maturity.' — Daily Mail. Mary Findlater. OVER THE HILLS. By Mary Findlater. Second Edition. Cr. 8vo. 6s. ' A strong and fascinating piece of work.' — Scotsjnan. ' A charming romance, and full of incident. The book is fresh and strong.' — Speaker. ' Will make the author's name loved in many a household.' — Literary World. ' A strong and wise book of deep insight and unflinching truth.'— Birmingham Post. Alfred Ollivant. OWD BOB, THE GREY DOG OF KENMUIR. By Alfred Ollivant. Second Edition. Cr. 8vo. 6s. 'Of breathless interest.' — British Weekly. ' Weird, thrilling, strikingly graphic' — Punch. ' This fine romance of dogs and men.' — Outlook. ' We admire this book extremely for its originality, for its virile and expressive English, above all for its grit. The book is to our mind the most powerful of its class that we have read. It is one to read with admiration and to praise with en- thusiasm.'— Bookman. ' It is a fine, open-air, blood-stirring book, to be enjoyed by every man and woman to whom a dog is dear.' — Literature. B. M. Croker. PEGGY OF THE BARTONS. By B. M. Croker, Author of 'Diana Barrington.' Fourth Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s. ' Mrs. Croker excels in the admirably simple, easy, and direct flow of her narrative, the briskness of her dialogue, and the geni- ality of her portraiture.' — Spectator. ' All the characters, indeed, are drawn with clearness and certainty ; and it would be hard to name any quality essential to first-class work which is lacking from this book.' — Saturday Review. H. G. Wells. THE STOLEN BA- CILLUS, and other Stories. By H. G. Wells. Second Edition. Crown Zvo. 6s. ' They are the impressions of a very striking imagination, which, it would seem, has a great deal within its reach.' — Saturday Review. H. G. Wells. THE PLATTNER STORY and Others. By H. G. Wells. Second Edition. Cr. 8vo. 6s. ' Weird and mysterious, they seem to hold the reader as by a magic spell.'— Scots- man. ' No volume has appeared for a long time so likely to give equal pleasure to the simplest reader and to the most fastidious critic' — Academy. Sara Jeanette Duncan. A VOYAGE OF CONSOLATION. By Sara Jeanette Duncan, Author of An American Girl in London.' Illus- trated. Third Edition. Cr. Svo. 6s. ' Humour, pure and spontaneous and irre- sistible.' — Daily Mail. 'A most delightfully bright book.' — Daily Telegraph. 'Eminently amusing and entertaining.' — Outlook. ' The dialogue is full of wit.' — Globe. 'Laughter lurks in every page.' — Daily News. C. F. Keary. THE JOURNALIST. By C. F. Keary. Cr. 8vo. 6s. 'An excellently written story, told with a sobriety and restrained force which are worthy of all praise.' — Standard. ' It is rare indeed to find such poetical sym- pathy with Nature joined to close study of character and singularly truthful dia- logue : but then "The Journalist " is altogether a rare book.' — Athenerum. 'Full of intellectual vigour.' — St. James's Gazette. E. F. Benson. DODO: A DETAIL OF THE DAY. By E. F. Benson. Sixteenth Edition. Cr. Svo. 6s. ' A delightfully witty sketch of society.' — Spectator. ' A perpetual feast of epigram and paradox. — Speaker.