Page:Lost Face (1910).djvu/265

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Jack London's Novels
Each, cloth, 12mo, $1.50

MARTIN EDEN

"The story possesses substance, form, vigor, and vitality as does everything that Mr. London writes. It is filled with the wine of life, with a life that Mr. London has himself lived, and to which he never wearies of giving every part of himself."—Boston Evening Transcript.

"The book is worth a thousand of the ordinary novel of society and is written with force and feeling, vigor and glow."—Chicago Tribune.

THE SEA-WOLF

"'The Sea- Wolf,' Jack London's latest novel of adventure, is one that every reader with good red blood in his veins will hail with delight. There is no fumbling of the trigger here, no nervous and uncertain sighting along the barrel, but the quick decisive aim and the bull's eye every time."—Mail and Express, New York.

THE CALL OF THE WILD

"Even the most listless reader will be stirred by the virile force of the story, the strong sweeping strokes with which the pictures of the northern wilds and the life therein are painted by the narrator, and the insight given into the soul of the primitive in nature. . . . More than that, it is one of the very best stories of the year, and one that will not be forgotten."—The Plain Dealer, Cleveland.

WHITE FANG

"Mr. London's vigorous incisive style, unconventionality, and sympathetic understanding of Nature and of her children in the rough, never combined to better advantage than in 'White Fang' . . . a splendid story, but it is more than a story it is a wonderful study in animal nature and development."—New York Times Saturday Review.


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THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
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