Page:The Stolen Bacillus.djvu/297

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Three-and-Sixpenny Library
5

MACMILLAN'S
EDITION OF THACKERAY
SOME OPINIONS OF THE PRESS

EXPOSITORY TIMES.— "An edition to do credit even to this publishing house, and not likely to be surpassed until they surpass it with a cheaper and better themselves."

WHITEHALL REVIEW.— "Never before has such a cheap and excellent edition of Thackeray been seen."

ACADEMY.— "A better one-volume edition at three shillings and sixpence could not be desired."

GRAPHIC.— "In its plain but pretty blue binding is both serviceable and attractive."

DAILY GRAPHIC.— "An excellent, cheap reprint."

PALL MALL GAZETTE.— "The size of the books is handy, paper and printing are good, and the binding, which is of blue cloth, is simple but tasteful. Altogether the publishers are to be congratulated upon a reprint which ought to be popular."

GLOBE.— "The paper is thin but good, the type used is clear to read, and the binding is neat and effective."

LADY'S PICTORIAL.— "The paper is good, the type clear and large, and the binding tasteful. Messrs. Macmillan are to be thanked for so admirable and inexpensive an edition of our great satirist."

WORLD.— "Nothing could be better than the new edition."

BLACK AND WHITE.— "The more one sees of the edition the more enamoured of it he becomes. It is so good and neat, immaculate as to print, and admirably bound."

SCOTSMAN.— "This admirable edition."

LITERARY WORLD.— "The paper and printing and general get up are everything that one could desire. "

ST. JAMES'S GAZETTE.— "A clear and pretty edition."