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THE RIGHT OF WAY
By GILBERT PARKER
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Outlook.—'The Right of Way is the right stuff—romance the royal. It is dramatic. It abounds in good things. Its inspiration is heroic. It is a powerful and moving novel, in which strong and natural situations abound.'
The Standard.—'The story deals with those strong passions and intense emotions that do not depend for their interest on the framework and setting in which they are presented. Nowhere else has the author worked with a surer touch or more careful craftsmanship. He has painted on larger canvasses, but not with so much precision of line, so much restraint, and such just harmony of tint; nor does he elsewhere exhibit an equal command of unforced pathos and genuine tragedy. The story is full of dramatic incident, ingeniously contrived.'
The Morning Post.—'Several of the scenes are described with great dramatic power. The whole of the quiet life is depicted with infinite skill, so that one seems to have known the place in "the olden days long ago."'
The Daily Chronicle.—'Mr. Parker gives us some finely dramatic episodes, some poignant passages in his own very best manner, curt, vivid, and graphic.'
The St. James's Gazette.—'A fine book, stirring, dramatic, fascinating.'
The Yorkshire Herald.—'The Right of Way is a remarkable book. The author has built an exquisite structure upon entirely new ground. The love-story is exquisitely told. The characters are traced with the pen of a master. We have not read anything equal to it for some time.'
THE LANE THAT HAD NO TURNING
By GILBERT PARKER
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Times.—'Not even in The Seats of the Mighty does Mr. Parker suggest such an impression of his strength as in the story which gives its title to the book. Strong and yet natural situations follow in rapid succession. In Madelinette Mr. Parker has idealized the noblest of women.'
Literature.—'The short story is very seldom wrought to perfection in England, but Mr. Gilbert Parker establishes once more his claim to be one of the very few writers who make that particular literary form a thing of art. He gives us once more the old Quebec type with its mood, so swiftly ranging from gaiety to pathos, its wit at once naïve and acute, and its devoted, even fanatical, love of tradition—a type which appeals more than any other in the empire to the English imagination. These stories are full of poetry, pathos, and dramatic force, and show a peculiar power of realising the possibilities of the short story.'
THE ETERNAL CITY
By HALL CAINE
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Daily Telegraph.—'Mr. Hall Caine has produced a remarkable novel.'
The St. James's Gazette.—' It is interesting, characteristic, and highly dramatic, and not too long. It is a stirring, warm-blooded story that one is sorry to have finished.'
The Daily News.—'Mr. Hall Caine has written a book that will strike the popular imagination.mw-parser-output .nowrap,.mw-parser-output .nowrap a:before,.mw-parser-output .nowrap .selflink:before{white-space:nowrap}. . . . He introduces no subtleties into his politics. Above all, he makes his human interest clear, strong, and intelligible.'
The Liverpool Daily Post.—'Hall Caine's Eternal City is a great novel, revealing the author at the very zenith of his gift. . . . The book's greatest wealth is its wealth of contagious and engrossing emotion. It is a triumph of imagination, of power over the feelings, as it is of dexterously used observation of an historic and most interesting and deeply agitated people. . . .'
The Daily Mail.—'He has written a vivid story, characterised by that keen eye for dramatic situations which has given him fame. There is little doubt that its popularity will rival that of its predecessors.'
The Liverpool Courier.—'The Eternal City, daring in its conception, and still more audacious in its execution, dealing not with a century ago or a decade back, but with to-day, referring to positions (if not to persons) that stand out prominent in the world's life, the present moment is the flood which must carry it to success. . . . Of its intrinsic worth there can be no doubt. It is the best that Mr. Caine has yet produced.'
The Scotsman.—'It may be asserted with confidence that no living author than Mr. Caine could have produced this work. It may be doubted whether any author who has lived for many generations past could have produced it. The novel stands out as a purely exceptional work. . . . The verdict must be that it is masterly in its conception and in its treatment. . . . Mr. Caine has produced a really fine work, a work that will carry on his reputation to a higher point than it has yet attained.'
THE CHRISTIAN
By HALL CAINE
In One Volume, price 6s.'
The Sketch.—'It quivers and palpitates with passion, for even Mr. Caine's bitterest detractors cannot deny that he is the possessor of that rarest of all gifts, genius.'
The Standard.—'The book has humour, it has pathos, it is full of colour and movement. It abounds in passages of terse, bold, animated descriptions. . . . There is, above all, the fascination of a skilful narrative.'
The Speaker.—'It is a notable book, written in the heart's blood of the author, and palpitating with the passionate enthusiasm that has inspired it. A book that is good to read, and that cannot fail to produce an impression on its readers.'
The Scotsman.—'The tale will enthral the reader by its natural power and beauty. The spell it casts is instantaneous, but it also gathers strength from chapter to chapter, until we are swept irresistibly along by the impetuous current of passion and action.'
THE MANXMAN
By HALL CAINE
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Times.—'With the exception of The Scapegoat, this is unquestionably the finest and most dramatic of Mr. Hall Caine's novels. . . . The Manxman goes very straight to the roots of human passion and emotion. It is a remarkable book, throbbing with human interest.'
The Queen.—'The Manxman is undoubtedly one of the most remarkable books of the century. It will be read and re-read, and take its place in the literary inheritance of the English-speaking nations.'
The St. James's Gazette.—'The Manxman is a contribution to literature, and the most fastidious critic would give in exchange for it a wilderness of that deciduous trash which our publishers call fiction. . . . It is not possible to part from The Manxman with anything but a warm tribute of approval.'—Edmund Gosse.
THE BONDMAN
By HALL CAINE
With a Photogravure Portrait of the Author.In One Volume, price 6s.
Mr. Gladstone.—'The Bondman is a work of which I recognise the freshness, vigour, and sustained interest, no less than its integrity of aim.'
The Times.—'It is impossible to deny originality and rude power to this saga, impossible not to admire its forceful directness, and the colossal grandeur of its leading characters.'
The Academy.—'The language of The Bondman is full of nervous, graphic, and poetical English; its interest never flags, and its situations and descriptions are magnificent. It is a splendid novel.'
The Speaker.—'This is the best book that Mr. Hall Caine has yet written, and it reaches a level to which fiction very rarely attains. . . . We are, in fact, so loth to let such good work be degraded by the title of "novel" that we are almost tempted to consider its claim to rank as a prose epic.'
THE SCAPEGOAT
By HALL CAINE
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Times.—'In our judgment it excels in dramatic force all the Author's previous efforts. For grace and touching pathos Naomi is a character which any romancist in the world might be proud to have created, and the tale of her parents' despair and hopes, and of her own development, confers upon The Scapegoat a distinction which is matchless of its kind.'
The Guardian.—'Mr. Hall Caine is undoubtedly master of a style which is peculiarly his own. He is in a way a Rembrandt among novelists.'
The Athenæum.—'It is a delightful story to read.'
The Academy.—'Israel ben Oliel is the third of a series of the most profoundly conceived characters in modern fiction.'
THE LUCK OF THE VAILS
By E. F. BENSON
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Times.—'One might begin to read The Luck of the Vails lying back in a comfortable chair, and chuckling over the natural talk of Mr. Benson's pleasant people. But after an hour or so, assuming that it is a hot day, and that you turn the leaves without great energy, you find yourself sitting up and gripping the arms of the chair, and glancing uneasily over your shoulder at the sound of a step upon the gravel. For this is a really thrilling and exciting tale of crime and mystery that Mr. Benson has written. It is readable all through and full of entertainment.'
The Bookman.—'Mr. Benson has got hold of a very pretty sensation, and treated it most effectively.'
The Spectator.—The book is very ingeniously constructed, and delightfully easy holiday reading, while the machinations of the septuagenarian villain, with his cheerful flute, his rosy cheeks, and his brisk enjoyment of life, are calculated to give a proper Christmas thrill on the hottest midsummer afternoon.
The Outlook.—'Admirably conceived and admirably written; it touches the supernatural with tactful fingers, but does not clutch it, introduces us to some charming people and some original scoundrels, and sends us to bed enthralled.'
The Daily News.—'A rattling good tale. The story is well worked up to a thrilling climax, and as a clever tale of plot and counter-plot, it can be cordially recommended.'
THE PRINCESS SOPHIA
By E. F. BENSON
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Athenæum.—'There is brilliance, lightness of touch. The dialogue is neat and brisk, and the miniature Court and its courtiers are amusingly treated.'
Literature.—'Told with verve and wit. If the novel is to amuse we cannot recommend a more agreeable companion than Mr. Benson's brilliant friend The Princess Sophia.'
The Westminster Gazette.—'A gay and spirited performance, and the Princess herself a clever picture. It is lively reading, and the characters bubble along in true Bensonian fashion.'
MAMMON & CO.
By E. F. BENSON
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Daily Telegraph.—'Bright, piquant, and entertaining from beginning to end, full of humorous sayings and witty things spoken by men and women who are merry and captivating. There is little to find fault with. It is a very clever, smart novel, wherein lies a little lesson and much entertainment.'
The Pall Mall Gazette.—'Mr. Benson's new story is in his happier and clever style. Happily, also, the liveliness does not tire. The repartee and rattle of the "smart set" are the genuine thing, and his own pretty conceits and happy little audacities of turn are not too forced.'
LOVE AND HIS MASK
By MENIE MURIEL DOWIE
In One Volume, price 6s.
Literature.—'All of the many different kinds of novel readers will enjoy Love and his Mask. It is a book that skilfully combines the more interesting points of a war story, the intimate delights of the now popular love-letters, the joys of an aristocratic circle, the consideration of the subtleties of a woman's heart, and the delineation of the conventional, straightforward, noble, harmless, necessary mind of man. The story is a refreshment from beginning to end. Love and his Mask will be one of the most popular novels of the autumn season.'
The Daily Chronicle.—An original idea, which Mrs. Norman develops with great skill, missing none of its humorous and dramatic possibilities. A delightful romance.'
Punch.—'A very clever novel, brightly written, with just that amount of the khaki flavour which rather more than "half-suspected animates the whole."'
FOREST FOLK
By JAMES PRIOR
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Spectator.—'We have no hesitation in welcoming Forest Folk as one of the very best and most original novels of the year, and our only regret is that we have failed to proclaim the fact sooner. The characterisation is excellent, the narrative is crowded with exciting incident, and the author has, in addition to an eye for the picturesque, a quite peculiar gift for describing effects of light and colour.'
The Athenæum.—'An excellent performance. The people are such forest folk as we are little likely to forget. The book reminds us of George Eliot in the unforced and racy style in which bucolic characters speak from its pages; it reminds us of Mr. Hardy in its dramatic situations.'
The Pall Mall Gazette.—'Mr. Prior has a large knowledge and is a keen observer of nature; he is cunning in devising strong situations, dramatic in describing them. His are forest folk indeed, men and women of flesh and blood.'
TANGLED TRINITIES
By DANIEL WOODROFFE
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Athenæum.—'Mr. Woodroffe has drawn a strong picture of temperaments and their surroundings.'
The St. James's Gazette.—'Full of live people, whom one remembers long. The whole book is charming.'
The Illustrated London News.—'Mr. Woodroffe writes with admirable clearness, picturesqueness, and restraint; he has an eye for character, and a grip of tragic possibilities. It is a moving story, and stamps the author as one of the few real artists who are now writing English fiction.'
FOLLY CORNER
By Mrs. HENRY DUDENEY
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Daily Telegraph.–'Mrs. Henry Dudeney is to be much congratulated. Folly Corner is quite a delightful novel—a well conceived story admirably told. Side by side with a notable story, the authoress places little pictures of Nature, of farm-life and country sights and sounds. Her descriptions of the life at Folly Corner afford a keen and unusual pleasure. We come to the last page with a strong wish for more, and a lively and unsatisfied interest in the chief characters concerned.'
THE MATERNITY OF HARRIOTT WICKEN
By Mrs. HENRY DUDENEY
In One Volume, price 6s.
Literature.—'A notable book. Mrs. Dudeney has the power of translating a feeling, an impression into a few vivid words, which faithfully transmit her experience to the mind of the reader, and this is a great art.'
The Daily Mail.—'The story is as singular as its title, and as strong as straightforward. . . . The drama haunts and grips us. There is humour in it, too, excellent humour. The Maternity of Harriott Wicken is a story that has elemental human nature in every chapter, and, therefore, sinks deep in the mind.'
SPINDLE AND PLOUGH
By Mrs. HENRY DUDENEY
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Daily Telegraph.—'Mrs. Dudeney has a power, as precious as it is rare, of conveying a whole scene in a few well-chosen words. Her observation is acute, her word-painting well-nigh exquisite.'
The Spectator.—'Mrs. Dudeney possesses the inestimable art of grasping and holding the attention of her readers.'
THE COURTESY DAME
By R. MURRAY GILCHRIST
In One Volume, price 6s.
Literature.—'It possesses all the sweetness and rusticity of a pastoral, but through it a thousand lights and shades of human passion are seen to play. The story will immediately grip the reader and hold him until he reaches the last chapter.'
The Morning Post.—'Mr. Murray Gilchrist is an artist to the point of his pen, whose story is at once among the freshest and sweetest of recent essays in imaginative writing.'
THE HOSTS OF THE LORD
By FLORA ANNIE STEEL
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Pall Mall Gazette.—'Mrs. Steel's latest wonderful romance of Indian life. It is '57 in little, and in our own day. Mrs. Steel has again subtly and keenly shown us how unique is her power of realising the unstably poised, the troubled half-and-half mind that is the key to the Indian problem.'
The Daily Chronicle.—'No one, not even the Kipling of an earlier day, quite does for India what Mrs. Steel does; she sees Indian life steadily, and sees it whole with a vision that is truthful, sympathetic. Such is the wealth of her observation that her page is rich with colour as an Eastern bazaar, and fragrant as a basket of quinces.'
VOICES IN THE NIGHT
By FLORA ANNIE STEEL
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Times.—'It is the native mind which Mrs. Steel shows us as no other writer has done. She sketches in the native scenes with intimate detail, with ease in obtaining her effects.'
Black and White.—'Mrs. Steel works on a crowded canvas, yet every figure stands out distinctly. Voices in the Night is a book to be read carefully. It is a book to be kept and to be read more than once. It is a novel of the best kind, and deserves the attention of the readers who find nothing praiseworthy in the effusions of the popular successes.'
ON THE FACE OF THE WATERS
By FLORA ANNIE STEEL
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Spectator.—'We have read Mrs. Steel's book with ever-increasing surprise and admiration—surprise at her insight into people with whom she can scarcely have been intimate, admiration for the genius which has enabled her to realise that wonderful welter of the East and West, which Delhi must have presented just before the Mutiny. There is many an officer who would give his sword to write military history as Mrs. Steel has written the history of the rising, the siege, and the storm. It is the most wonderful picture. We know that none who lived through the Mutiny will lay the book down without a gasp of admiration, and believe that the same emotion will be felt by thousands to whom the scenes depicted are but lurid phantasmagoria.'
The Daily Chronicle.—'A picture, glowing with colour, of the most momentous and dramatic events in all our Empire's later history. We have read many stories having for their setting the lurid background of the Indian Mutiny, but none that for fidelity to fact, for vivacity of imagination, for masterly breadth of treatment, comes within half a dozen places of this.'
IN THE PERMANENT WAY
By FLORA ANNIE STEEL
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Spectator.—'While her only rival in this field of fiction is Mr. Kipling, her work is marked by an even subtler appreciation of the Oriental standpoint—both ethical and religious a more exhaustive acquaintance with native life in its domestic and indoor aspects, and a deeper sense of the moral responsibilities attaching to our rule in the East. The book is profoundly interesting from beginning to end.'
The Pall Mall Gazette.—'A volume of charming stories and of stories possessing something more than mere charm. Stories made rich with beauty and colour, strong with the strength of truth, and pathetic with the intimate pathos which grows only from the heart. All the mystery and the frankness, the simplicity and the complexity of Indian life are here in a glowing setting of brilliant Oriental hues. A book to read and a book to buy. A book which no one but Mrs. Steel could have given us, a book which all persons of leisure should read, and for which all persons of taste will be grateful.'
FROM THE FIVE RIVERS
By FLORA ANNIE STEEL
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Times.—'Mrs. Steel has evidently been brought into close contact with the domestic life of all classes, Hindu and Mahommedan, in city and village, and has steeped herself in their customs and superstitions. . . . Mrs. Steel's book is of exceptional merit and freshness.'
The Athenæum.—'They possess this great merit, that they reflect the habits, modes of life, and ideas of the middle and lower classes of the population of Northern India better than do systematic and more pretentious works.'
The Globe.—'She puts before us the natives of our Empire in the East as they live and move and speak, with their pitiful superstitions, their strange fancies, their melancholy ignorance of what poses with us for knowledge and civilisation, their doubt of the new ways, the new laws, the new people. "Shah Sujah's Mouse," the gem of the collection—a touching tale of unreasoning fidelity towards an English "Sinny Baba" is a tiny bit of perfect writing.'
THE POTTER'S THUMB
By FLORA ANNIE STEEL
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Globe.— 'This is a brilliant story a story that fascinates, tingling with life, steeped in sympathy with all that is best and saddest.'
The Manchester Guardian.—'The impression left upon one after reading The Potter's Thumb is that a new literary artist, of very great and unusual gifts, has arisen. . . . In short, Mrs. Steel must be congratulated upon having achieved a very genuine and amply deserved success.'
The Scotsman.—'It is a capital story, full of variety and movement, which brings with great vividness before the reader one of the phases of Anglo-Indian life. Mrs. Steel writes forcibly and sympathetically, and much of the charm of the picture which she draws lies in the force with which she brings out the contrast between the Asiatic and European world. The Potter's Thumb is very good reading, with its mingling of the tragedy and comedy of life. Its evil woman par excellence . . . is a finished study.'
RED ROWANS
By FLORA ANNIE STEEL
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Daily Chronicle.—'Judge it by what canons of criticism you will the book is a work of art. . . . The story is simple enough, but it is as lifelike as anything in modern fiction. The people speak and act as people do act and speak. There is not a false note throughout. Mrs. Steel draws children as none but a master-hand can draw.'
The Westminster Gazette.—'Far and away above the average of novels, and one of those books which no reader should miss.'
The Daily News.—'The book is written with distinction. It is moving, picturesque, the character drawing is sensitive and strong.'
Black and White.—'It reveals keen sympathy with nature and clever portraiture, and it possesses many passages both humorous and pathetic.'
THE FLOWER OF FORGIVENESS
By FLORA ANNIE STEEL
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Academy.—'Nothing here ought to be neglected, for there is in most places something profitable for not too obtrusive exhortation, and almost everywhere something for enjoyment.'
The Glasgow Herald.—'A clever book which should tend to widen Mrs. Steel's circle among the reading public.'
The Scotsman.—'They have a rich imaginative colour always.'
The Manchester Guardian.—'Much sympathy with humanity however dark the skin, and a delicate touch in narrative, raise Mrs. F. A. Steel's Indian Stories into a high rank. There is a pathos in them not common among Anglo-Indian story-tellers.'
MISS STUART'S LEGACY
By FLORA ANNIE STEEL
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Saturday Review.—'It throbs with the vigour of real creative power.'
The Spectator.—'It is remarkably clever; it is written in a style which has ease, dignity, grace, and quick responsiveness to the demands of the theme; it has passages of arresting power and fine reticent pathos; and it displays a quick eye for character and a power of depicting it with both force and subtlety.'
The Westminster Gazette.—'A most faithful, vivid impression of Indian life.'
The Daily Telegraph.—' A singularly powerful and fascinating story.'
BOWERY TALES(George's Mother, and Maggie.)
By STEPHEN CRANE
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Morning Post.—'Mr. Crane never wrote anything more vivid than the story in which Maggie takes the heroine's part. It is as admirable in its own field as The Red Badge of Courage in another.'
The Illustrated London News.—'Stephen Crane knew the Bowery very well, and in these two stories its characteristics come out with the realism of Mr. Arthur Morrison's studies of the East End. Both are grim and powerful sketches.'
PICTURES OF WAR(The Red Badge of Courage, and The Little Regiment.)
By STEPHEN CRANE
In One Volume, price 6s.
Truth.—'The pictures themselves are certainly wonderful. . . . So fine a book as Mr. Stephen Crane's Pictures of War is not to be judged pedantically.'
The Daily Graphic.—'. . . A second reading leaves one with no whit diminished opinion of their extraordinary power. Stories they are not really, but as vivid war pictures they have scarcely been equalled. . . . One cannot recall any book which conveys to the outsider more clearly what war means to the fighters than this collection of brilliant pictures.'
THE OPEN BOAT
By STEPHEN CRANE
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Saturday Review.—'. . . The most artistic thing Mr. Crane has yet accomplished.'
The St. James's Gazette.—'Each tale is the concise, clear, vivid record of one sensational impression. Facts, epithets, or colours are given to the reader with a rigorousness of selection, an artfulness of restraint, that achieves an absolute clearness in the resulting imaginative vision. Mr. Crane has a personal touch of artistry that is refreshing.'
ACTIVE SERVICE
By STEPHEN CRANE
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Athenæum.—'The characters are admirably sketched and sustained. There is tenderness; there is brilliancy; there is real insight into the minds and ways of women and of men.'
The Spectator.—'Mr. Crane's plot is ingenious and entertaining, and the characterisation full of those unexpected strokes in which he excels.'
The Academy.—'The book is full of those feats of description for which the author is famous. Mr. Crane can handle the epithet with surprising, almost miraculous dexterity. Active Service quite deserve to be called a remarkable book.'
THE THIRD VIOLET
By STEPHEN CRANE
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Athenæum.—'We have never come across a book that brought certain sections of American society so perfectly before the reader as does The Third Violet, which introduces us to a farming family, to the boarders at a summer hotel, and to the young artists of New York. The picture is an extremely pleasant one, and its truth appeals to the English reader, so that the effect of the book is to draw him nearer to his American cousins. The Third Violet incidentally contains the best dog we have come across in modern fiction. Mr. Crane's dialogue is excellent, and it is dialogue of a type for which neither The Red Badge of Courage nor his later books had prepared us.'
AFRICAN NIGHTS' ENTERNAINMENT
By A. J. DAWSON
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Pall Mall Gazette.—'His stories have the special attraction of stories of a country by a man who has knowledge of it and is under its fascination ; and are good stories into the bargain. He has a pretty humour, and the gift of telling a story well, and special knowledge to work upon ; the result is an entertaining book.'
The Scotsman.—'The stories are all invented and written with that glow of imagination which seems to come of Eastern sunshine. . . . They are besides novel and readable in no ordinary degree, and they make a book which will not fail to interest every one who takes it up.'
THE STORY OF RONALD KESTREL
By A. J. DAWSON
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Athenæum.—'The sketches of life and scenery in Morocco and in New South Wales are attractive, the literary composition keeps a good level throughout. Mr. Dawson is a writer of ability who has seen men and things, and should go far.'
The Daily Telegraph.—'Mr. Dawson's mise-en-scene is always one of the main features in his work. In the present story it is very varied, beginning the life-history of the hero in Morocco, meeting him again in Australia, and finally transporting him to the London of Bloomsbury. In Morocco and in Australia we are conscious of the heat-laden, distinctive atmosphere in the one case Oriental and mystic, in the other vast, burning and prophetic.'
JOSEPH KHASSAN: HALF-CASTE
By A. J. DAWSON
In One Volume, price 6s.
THE LION AND THE UNICORN
By RICHARD HARDING DAVIS
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Pall Mall Gazette.—'Eight short stories, each of them written with a brilliance worthy of the author of Soldiers of Fortune, and each a perfect piece of workmanship. Every one of them has a striking and original idea, clothed in the words and picturesque details of a man who knows the world. They are genuine literature. Each is intensely fresh and distinct, ingenious in conception, and with a meaning compounded of genuine stuff. There is something in all of the stories, as well as immense cleverness in bringing it out.'
The Daily Telegraph.—'Stories of real excellence, distinctive and interesting from every point of view.'
SOLDIERS OF FORTUNE
By RICHARD HARDING DAVIS
In One Volume, price 6s. Illustrated.
The Athenæum.— 'The adventures and exciting incidents in the book are admirable; the whole story of the revolution is most brilliantly told. This is really a great tale of adventure.'
The Daily Chronicle.—'We turn the pages quickly, carried on by a swiftly moving story, and many a brilliant passage: and when we put the book down, our impression is that few works of this season are to be named with it for the many qualities which make a successful novel. We congratulate Mr. Harding Davis upon a very clever piece of work.'
THE NIGGER OF THE 'NARCISSUS’
By JOSEPH CONRAD
In One Volume, price 6s.
A. T. Quiller-Couch in Pall Mall Magazine.—'Mr. Conrad's is a thoroughly good tale. He has something of Mr. Crane's insistence; he grips a situation, an incident, much as Mr. Browning's Italian wished to grasp Metternich; he squeezes emotion and colour out of it to the last drop; he is ferociously vivid; he knows the life he is writing about, and he knows his seamen too. And, by consequence, the crew of the Narcissus are the most plausibly life-like set of rascals that ever sailed through the pages of fiction.'
THE INHERITORS
By JOSEPH CONRAD and F. M. HUEFFER
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Athenæum.—'This is a remarkable piece of work, possessing qualifications which before now have made a work of fiction the sensation of its year. Its craftsmanship is such as one has learnt to expect in a book bearing Mr. Conrad's name. . . . Amazing intricacy, exquisite keenness of style, and a large, fantastic daring in scheme. An extravaganza The Inheritors may certainly be called, but more ability and artistry has gone to the making of it than may be found in four-fifths of the serious fiction of the year.'
JACK RAYMOND
By E. L. VOYNICH
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Pall Mall Gazette.—'This is a remarkable book. Mrs. Voynich has essayed no less than to analyse a boy's character as warped even to the edge of permanent injury by the systematic sternness—aggravated on occasion into fiendish brutality—of his guardian. We know nothing in recent fiction comparable with the grim scene in which the boy forces his uncle to listen to the maledictions of the Commination Service directed against himself. Jack Raymond is the strongest novel that the present season has produced, and it will add to the reputation its author won by The Gadfly.'
THE GADFLY
By E. L. VOYNICH
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Academy.—'A remarkable story, which readers who prefer flesh and blood and human emotions to sawdust and adventure should consider as something of a godsend. It is more deeply interesting and rich in promise than ninety-nine out of every hundred novels.'
The World.—'The strength and originality of the story are indisputable.'
The St. James's Gazette.—'A very strikingly original romance which will hold the attention of all who read it, and establish the author's reputation at once for first-rate dramatic ability and power of expression.'
VOYSEY
By R. O. PROWSE
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Standard.—'The analytical power displayed makes this book a remarkable one, and the drawing of the chief figures is almost startlingly good.'
The Daily News.—'A novel of conspicuous ability.'
FROM A SWEDISH HOMESTEAD
By SELMA LAGERLOF
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Athenæum.—'The very strangeness of her genius is one of its chief charms. Her domain lies on the outskirts of fairyland, and there is an other-worldliness about her most real and convincing characters.'
The Spectator.—'We are glad to welcome in this delightful volume evidence of the unabated vitality of that vein of fantastic invention which ran purest in the tales of Andersen. The influence of Gœthe's Wilhelm Meister is obvious in the longest and most beautiful story of the collection. But when all deductions are made on the score of indebtedness, the originality of plot and treatment remain unquestioned. The story is rendered touching and convincing by the ingenious charm and sincerity of the narrator.'
THE MANTLE OF ELIJAH
By I. ZANGWILL
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Athenæum.—'Contains cleverness of a very varied kind traits of fine imagination, of high spiritual feeling, keen observation, and a singular sense of discrimination in character and dialogue.'
The Outlook.—'His story and the figures which people its pages are of a vivid and absorbing interest, instinct with life, and on every page some witty and memorable phrase, or trenchant thought, or vivid picture.'
THEY THAT WALK IN DARKNESS
By I. ZANGWILL
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Spectator.—'No reader, who is not blinded by prejudice, will rise from the perusal of this engrossing volume without an enhanced sense of compassion for, and admiration of, the singular race of whose traits Mr. Zangwill is, perhaps, the most gifted interpreter.'
The Standard.—' These stories are of singular merit. They are, mostly, of a tragic order; but this does not by any means keep out a subtle humour; they possess also a tenderness . . . and a power that is kept in great restraint and is all the more telling in consequence.'
DREAMERS OF THE GHETTO
By I. ZANGWILL
In One Volume, price 6s.
W. E. Henley in 'The Outlook.'—'A brave, eloquent, absorbing, and, on the whole, persuasive book. . . . I find them all vastly agreeable reading, and I take pleasure in recognising them all for the work of a man who loves his race, and for his race's sake would like to make literature. . . . Here, I take it—here, so it seems to me—is that rarest of rare things, a book.'
The Daily Chronicle.—'It is hard to describe this book, for we can think of no exact parallel to it. In form, perhaps, it comes nearest to some of Walter Pater's work. For each of the fifteen chapters contains a criticism of thought under the similitude of an "Imaginary Portrait." . . . We have a vision of the years presented to us in typical souls.'
THE MASTER
By I. ZANGWILL
With a Photogravure portrait of the AuthorIn One Volume, price 6s.
The Queen.—'It is impossible to deny the greatness of a book like The Master, a veritable human document, in which the characters do exactly as they would in life. . . . I venture to say that Matt himself is one of the most striking and original characters in our fiction, and I have not the least doubt that The Master will always be reckoned one of our classics.'
The Literary World.—'In The Master, Mr. Zangwill has eclipsed all his previous work. This strong and striking story is genuinely powerful in its tragedy, and picturesque in its completeness. . . . The work strikes a truly tragic chord, which leaves a deep impression upon the mind.'
CHILDREN OF THE GHETTO
By I. ZANGWILL
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Times.— 'From whatever point of view we regard it, it is a remarkable book.'
The Guardian.—'A novel such as only our own day could produce. A masterly study of a complicated psychological problem in which every factor is handled with such astonishing dexterity and intelligence that again and again we are tempted to think a really great book has come into our hands.'
Black and White.—'A moving panorama of Jewish life, full of truth, full of sympathy, vivid in the setting forth, and occasionally most brilliant. Such a book as this has the germs of a dozen novels. A book to read, to keep, to ponder over, to remember.'
The Manchester Guardian.—'The best Jewish novel ever written.'
THE KING OF SCHNORRERS
By I. ZANGWILL
With over Ninety Illustrations by Phil MAY and Others.In One Volume, price 6s.
The Saturday Review.—'Mr. Zangwill has created a new figure in fiction, and a new type of humour. The entire series of adventures is a triumphant progress. . . . Humour of a rich and active character pervades the delightful history of Manasseh. Mr. Zangwill's book is altogether very good reading. It is also very cleverly illustrated by Phil May and other artists.'
The Daily Chronicle.—'It is a beautiful story. The King of Schnorrers is that great rarity—an entirely new thing, that is as good as it is new.'
THE CELIBATES' CLUB
By I. ZANGWILL
In One Volume, price 6s.
The St. James's Gazette.—'Mr. Zangwill's Bachelors' Club and Old Maids' Club have separately had such a success—as their sparkling humour, gay characterisation, and irresistible punning richly deserved—that it is no surprise to find Mr. Heinemann now issuing them together in one volume. Readers who have not purchased the separate volumes will be glad to add this joint publication to their bookshelves. Others, who have failed to read either, until they foolishly imagined that it was too late, have now the best excuse for combining the pleasures of two.'
THE PREMIER AND THE PAINTER
By I. ZANGWILL and LOUIS COWEN
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Morning Post.—'The story is described as a "fantastic romance," and, indeed, fantasy reigns supreme from the first to the last of its pages. It relates the history of our time with humour and well-aimed sarcasm. All the most prominent characters of the day, whether political or otherwise, come in for notice. The identity of the leading politicians is but thinly veiled, while many celebrities appear in propriâ personâ.'
THE WORLD'S MERCY
By MAXWELL GRAY
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Speaker.—'Those who most admired The Silence of Dean Maitland will find much to hold their attention, and to make them think in The World's Mercy.'
The Daily Telegraph.—'The qualities of her pen make all of Maxwell Gray's work interesting, and the charm of her writing is unalterable. If The World's Mercy is painful, it is undeniably forcible and dramatic, and it holds the reader from start to finish.'
THE HOUSE OF HIDDEN TREASURE
By MAXWELL GRAY
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Chronicle.—'There is a strong and pervading charm in this new novel by Maxwell Gray. . . . It is full of tragedy and irony, though irony is not the dominant note.'
The Times.—'Its buoyant humour and lively character-drawing will be found very enjoyable.'
The Daily Mail.—'The book becomes positively great, fathoming a depth of human pathos which has not been equalled in any novel we have read for years past. . . . The House of Hidden Treasure is not a novel to be borrowed; it is a book to be bought and read, and read again and again.'
THE LAST SENTENCE
By MAXWELL GRAY
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Standard.—'The Last Sentence is a remarkable story; it abounds with dramatic situations, the interest never for a moment flags, and the characters are well drawn and consistent.'
The Daily Telegraph.—'One of the most powerful and adroitly worked-out plots embodied in any modern work of fiction runs through The Last Sentence. . . . This terrible tale of retribution is told with well-sustained force and picturesqueness, and abounds in light as well as shade.'
SWEETHEARTS AND FRIENDS
By MAXWELL GRAY
In One Volume, price 6s.
FOUR-LEAVED CLOVER
By MAXWELL GRAY
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Athenæum.—'Brightly and pleasantly written, Maxwell Gray's new story will entertain all readers who can enjoy the purely sentimental in fiction.'
The Scotsman.—'The story is full of bright dialogue: it is one of the pleasantest and healthiest novels of the season.'
HEARTS IMPORTUNATE
By EVELYN DICKINSON
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Daily Telegraph.—'Happy in title and successful in evolution, Miss Dickinson's novel is very welcome. We have read it with great pleasure, due not only to the interest of the theme, but to an appreciation of the artistic method, and the innate power of the authoress. It is vigorous, forcible, convincing.'
The Pall Mall Gazette.—'An enjoyable book, and a clever one.'
THE HIDDEN MODEL
By FRANCES HARROD
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Outlook.—'Intensely dramatic and moving. We have sensitive analysis of character, sentiment, colour, agreeable pathos.'
The Athenæum.—'A good story simply told and undidactic, with men and women in it who are creatures of real flesh and blood. An artistic coterie is described briefly and pithily, with humour and without exaggeration.'
The Academy.—'A pathetic little love idyll, touching, plaintive, and not without a kindly and gentle fascination.'
Literature.—'A remarkably original and powerful story: one of the most interesting and original books of the year.'
The Sunday Special.—'Thrilling from cover to cover.'
SAWDUST
By DOROTHEA GERARD
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Athenæum.—'Once again Dorothea Gerard has shown considerable ability in the delineation of diverse characters—ability as evident in the minor as in the chief persons; and, what is more, she gets her effects without any undue labouring of points as to the goodness or badness of her people.'
The Pall Mall Gazette.—'The little town of Zanee, a retired spot in the lower Carpathians, is the scene of Miss Gerard's book. Remote enough, geographically; but the writer has not seen her Galician peasants as foreigners, nor has she made them other than entirely human. Human, too, are the scheming Jews, the Polish Counts and Countesses, the German millionaire. The story is simple and eminently natural.'
GLORIA MUNDI
By HAROLD FREDERIC
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Daily Chronicle.—'Mr. Harold Frederic has here achieved a triumph of characterisation rare indeed in fiction, even in such fiction as is given us by our greatest. Gloria Mundi is a work of art; and one cannot read a dozen of its pages without feeling that the artist was an informed, large-minded, tolerant man of the world.'
The St. James's Gazette.—'It is packed with interesting thought as well as clear-cut individual and living character, and is certainly one of the few striking serious novels, apart from adventure and romance, which have been produced this year.'
ILLUMINATION
By HAROLD FREDERIC
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Spectator.—'There is something more than the mere touch of the vanished hand that wrote The Scarlet Letter in Illumination, which is the best novel Mr. Harold Frederic has produced, and, indeed, places him very near if not quite at the head of the newest school of American fiction.'
The Manchester Guardian.—'It is a long time since a book of such genuine importance has appeared. It will not only afford novel-readers food for discussion during the coming season, but it will eventually fill a recognised place in English fiction.'
THE MARKET-PLACE
By HAROLD FREDERIC
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Times.—'Harold Frederic stood head and shoulders above the ordinary run of novelists. The Market-Place seizes the imagination and holds the reader's interest, and it is suggestive and stimulating to thought.'
The Bookman.—'Incomparably the best novel of the year. It is a ruthless exposure, a merciless satire. Both as satire and romance it is splendid reading. As a romance of the "City" it has no equal in modern fiction.'
THE LAKE OF WINE
By BERNARD CAPES
In One Volume, price 6s.
W. E. Henley in 'The Outlook.'—'Mr. Capes's devotion to style does him yeoman service all through this excellent romance. . . . I have read no book for long which contented me as this book. This story—excellently invented and excellently done—is one no lover of romance can afford to leave unread.'
The St. James's Gazette.—'The love-motif is of the quaintest and daintiest; the clash of arms is Stevensonian. . . . There is a vein of mystery running through the book, and greatly enhancing its interest.'
VIA LUCIS
By KASSANDRA VIVARIA
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Daily Telegraph.—'Perhaps never before has there been related with such detail, such convincing honesty, and such pitiless clearsightedness, the tale of misery and torturing perplexity, through which a young and ardent seeker after truth can struggle. It is all so strongly drawn. The book is simply and quietly written, and gains in force from its clear, direct style. Every page, every descriptive line bears the stamp of truth.'
The Morning Post.—'Via Lucis is but one more exercise, and by no means the least admirable, on that great and inexhaustible theme which has inspired countless artists and poets and novelists—the conflict between the aspirations of the soul for rest in religion and of the heart for human love and the warfare of the world.
THE OPEN QUESTION
By ELIZABETH ROBINS
In One Volume, price 6s.
The St. James's Gazette.—'This is an extraordinarily fine novel. . . . We have not, for many years, come across a serious novel of modern life which has more powerfully impressed our imagination, or created such an instant conviction of the genius of its writer. . . . We express our own decided opinion that it is a book which, setting itself a profound human problem, treats it in a manner worthy of the profoundest thinkers of the time, with a literary art and a fulness of the knowledge of life which stamp a master novelist. . . . It is not meat for little people or for fools; but for those who care for English fiction as a vehicle of the constructive intellect, building up types of living humanity for our study, it will be a new revelation of strength, and strange, serious beauty.
BELOW THE SALT
By ELIZABETH ROBINS
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Daily Chronicle.—'All cleverly told, vivacious, life-like, observant sketches. Were we to award the palm where all are meritorious, it should be to the delightful triplet entitled 'The Portman Memoirs.' These three sketches are positively exhilarating. We can sincerely recommend them as certain cures for the vapours, the spleen, or the "blues."'
THE LADY OF DREAMS
By UNA L. SILBERRAD
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Athenæum.—' Shows marked ability. There is taste and restraint in its composition; dialogue is used at the right points and in due proportion; and the setting of a scene where an important incident occurs is always well sketched. The reader's interest is well and legitimately sustained.'
The British Weekly.—'Many novel-readers will pronounce this the best book of its year. It is a work of genius which gives Miss Silberrad a place amongst our foremost writers.'
ST. IVES
By ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Times.—'Neither Stevenson himself nor any one else has given us a better example of a dashing story, full of life and colour and interest. St. Ives is both an entirely delightful personage and a narrator with an enthralling style a character who will be treasured up in the memory along with David Balfour and Alan Breck, even with D'Artagnan and the Musketeers.'
THE EBB-TIDE
By ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSONandLLOYD OSBOURNE
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Daily Chronicle.—'We are swept along without a pause on the current of the animated and vigorous narrative. Each incident and adventure is told with that incomparable keenness of vision which is Mr. Stevenson's greatest charm as a story-teller.'
The Pall Mall Gazette.— 'It is brilliantly invented, and it is not less brilliantly told. There is not a dull sentence in the whole run of it. And the style is fresh, alert, full of surprises—in fact, is very good latter-day Stevenson indeed.'
THE QUEEN VERSUS BILLY
By LLOYD OSBOURNE
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Pall Mall Gazette.—'Of the nine stories in this volume, not one falls below a notably high level, while three or four of them at least attain what short stories not often do, the certainty that they will be re-read, and vividly remembered between re-readings. Mr. Osbourne writes often with a delicious rollick of humour, sometimes with a pathos from which tears are not far remote, and always with the buoyancy and crispness without which the short story is naught, and with which it can be so much.'
The Outlook.—'These stories are admirable. They are positive good things, wanting not for strength, pathos, humour, observation.'
CHINATOWN STORIES
By C. B. FERNALD
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Academy.—'We feel that Mr. Fernald has described the Chinese character with extraordinary accuracy. His range is considerable; he begins this volume, for example, with an idyllic story of an adorable Chinese infant. . . . This is sheer good-humour, and prettiness and colour. And at the end of the book is one of the grimmest and ablest yarns of Chinese piracy and high sea villainy that any one has written, Stevenson not excluded. In each of these we see the hand of a very capable literary artist. It is a fascinating book.'
A DAUGHTER OF THE VELDT
By BASIL MARNAN
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Morning Post.—'A strong, clever, and striking book. Mr. Basil Marnan has drawn some vivid and wholly new pictures. The book has scenes of dramatic power, told with simple directness.'
The Daily Chronicle.—'It has interested us profoundly, and has given us good and sufficient reason to hope that another novel from the same hand and with the same mise-en-scène, may before very long come our way.'
The Scotsman.—'This is a South African novel which should arrest attention. It is of engrossing interest. Mr. Marnan has dramatic power, a vivid descriptive talent, and a rich and expressive style. He has written a remarkable book.'
ON THE EDGE OF THE EMPIRE
By EDGAR JEPSON and CAPTAIN D. BEAMES
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Spectator.—'Of the wealth and interest and variety of the matter there can be no question. It might be called the Book of the Sepoy, for no writer, not even Mr. Kipling himself, has given us a deeper insight into the character of the Indian fighting man, or brought home to us more vividly the composite nature of our native regiments.'
The Daily News.—'The picturesque native soldier has never been more fully described or more realistically painted than in the present volume. The book is packed full of good stuff, and deserves to be widely read.'
THE LION'S BROOD
By DUFFIELD OSBORNE
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Spectator.—'Mr. Osborne's story transports us to Rome and Capua in the days of Hannibal. It is well told, with much vivid detail of Roman and Capuan manners, and more vitality in the characters than generally gets into the historical tale.'
The Athenæum.—'A good classical novel is the rarest of good things, and The Lion's Brood is a meritorious piece of work.'
THE EAGLE'S HEART
By HAMLIN GARLAND
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Athenæum.—'Mr. Garland's work is always fresh and vigorous, and this story is full of his characteristic energy. He makes one share with delight in the irresistible fascination of wild life in the Far West.'
The Illustrated London News.—'If Mr. Hamlin Garland had never written anything else, The Eagle's Heart would suffice to win him a reputation. It is a fine book, instinct with humanity, quivering with strength, and in every fibre of it alive.'
THE BETH BOOK
By SARAH GRAND
In One Volume, price 6s.
Punch.—'The heroine of The Beth Book is one of Sarah Grand's most fascinating creations. With such realistic art is her life set forth that, for a while, the reader will probably be under the impression that he has before him the actual story of a wayward genius compiled from her genuine diary. The story is absorbing; the truth to nature in the characters, whether virtuous, ordinary, or vicious, every reader with some experience will recognise.'
The Globe.—'It is quite safe to prophesy that those who peruse The Beth Book will linger delightedly over one of the freshest and deepest studies of child character ever given to the world, and hereafter will rind it an ever-present factor in their literary recollections and impressions.'
THE HEAVENLY TWINS
By SARAH GRAND
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Athenæum.—'It is so full of interest, and the characters are so eccentrically humorous yet true, that one feels inclined to pardon all its faults, and give oneself up to unreserved enjoyment of it. . . . The twins Angelica and Diavolo, young barbarians, utterly devoid of all respect, conventionality, or decency, are among the most delightful and amusing children in fiction.'
The Daily Telegraph.—'Everybody ought to read it, for it is an inexhaustible source of refreshing and highly stimulating entertainment.'
Punch.—'The Twins themselves are a creation: the epithet "Heavenly" for these two mischievous little fiends is admirable.'
IDEALA
By SARAH GRAND
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Morning Post.—'It is remarkable as the outcome of an earnest mind seeking in good faith the solution of a difficult and ever present problem. . . . Ideala is original and somewhat daring. . . . The story is in many ways delightful and thought-suggesting.'
The Liverpool Mercury.—'The book is a wonderful one—an evangel for the fair sex, and at once an inspiration and a comforting companion, to which thoughtful womanhood will recur again and again.'
OUR MANIFOLD NATURE
By SARAH GRAND
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Spectator.—'All these studies, male and female alike, are marked by humour, pathos, and fidelity to life.'
The Speaker.—'In Our Manifold Nature Sarah Grand is seen at her best. How good that is can only be known by those who read for themselves this admirable little volume.'
The Guardian.—'Our Manifold Nature is a clever book. Sarah Grand has the power of touching common things, which, if it fails to make them "rise to touch the spheres," renders them exceedingly interesting.'
THE LAND OF COCKAYNE
By MATILDE SERAO
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Pall Mall Gazette.—'It is long since we have read, and indeed re-read, any book of modern fiction with so absorbing an interest as The Land of Cockayne, the latest book by Matilde Serao (Heinemann), and surely as fine a piece of work as the genius of this writer has yet accomplished. It is splendid! The character-drawing is subtle and convincing; every touch tells. Such books as The Land of Cockayne are epoch-making, voices that cry aloud in the wilderness of modern "literature," and will be heard while others only cackle.'
THE SCOURGE-STICK
By Mrs. CAMPBELL PRAED
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Observer.—' Not only is The Scourge-Stick the best novel that Mrs. Praed has yet written, but it is one that will long occupy a prominent place in the literature of the age.'
The Illustrated London News.—'A singularly powerful study of a woman who fails in everything, only to rise on stepping-stones to higher things. A succession of strong, natural, and exciting situations.'
Black and White.—'A notable book which must be admitted by all to have real power, and that most intangible quality—fascination.'
IN HASTE AND AT LEISURE
By E. LYNN LINTON
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Literary World.—'Whatever its exaggerations may be, In Haste and at Leisure remains a notable achievement. It has given us pleasure, and we can recommend it with confidence.'
The World.—'It is clever, and well written.'
The Graphic.—'It is thoroughly interesting, and it is full of passages that almost irresistibly tempt quotation.'
The St. James's Gazette.—'It is a novel that ought to be, and will be, widely read and enjoyed.'
NUDE SOULS
By BENJAMIN SWIFT
In One Volume, price 6s.
Mr. W. L. Courtney in the 'Daily Telegraph.'—'Any one who is so obviously sincere as Mr. Benjamin Swift is an author who must be reckoned with. The story is very vivid, very poignant, very fascinating.'
The World.—'Mr. Benjamin Swift was a bold man when he called his new story Nude Souls. There is a self-assertion about this title which only success could justify. Let it be said at once that the author has succeeded. He lays absolutely bare before the reader the souls of a striking company of men and women. There is that about the book which makes the reader loth to put it down, loth to come to the end—comprehension of human nature, and relentless power of expression.'
THE LONDONERS
By ROBERT HICHENS
In One Volume, price 6s.
Punch.—'Mr. Hichens calls his eccentric story "an absurdity," and so it is. As amusing nonsense, written in a happy-go-lucky style, it works up to a genuine hearty-laugh-extracting scene. . . . The Londoners is one of the most outrageous pieces of extravagant absurdity we have come across for many a day.'
The Pall Mall Gazette.—'It is all screamingly funny, and does great credit to Mr. Hichens's luxuriant imagination.'
AN IMAGINATIVE MAN
By ROBERT HICHENS
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Scotsman.—'It is no doubt a remarkable book. If it has almost none of the humour of its predecessor (The Green Carnation), it is written with the same brilliancy of style, and the same skill is shown in the drawing of accessories. Mr. Hichens's three characters never fail to be interesting. They are presented with very considerable power, while the background of Egyptian life and scenery is drawn with a sure hand.'
THE FOLLY OF EUSTACE
By ROBERT HICHENS
In One Volume, price 6s.
The World.— 'The little story is as fantastic and also as reasonable as could be desired, with the occasional dash of strong sentiment, the sudden turning on of the lights of sound knowledge of life and things that we find in the author when he is most fanciful. The others are weird enough and strong enough in human interest to make a name for their writer had his name needed making.'
THE SLAVE
By ROBERT HICHENS
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Speaker.—'It tells an extremely interesting story, and it is full of entertaining episodes. Above all, the romance of London is treated as it has never been since the glorious reign of Prince Florizel of Bohemia, and, if only on that account, The Slave is a book for the busy to remember and for the leisurely to read.'
The Daily Telegraph.—'The book deserves to be widely read. Sir Reuben Allabruth, a figure of real distinction, will take his place among the shades of fiction.'
FLAMES
By ROBERT HICHENS
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Daily Chronicle.—'A cunning blend of the romantic and the real, the work of a man who can observe, who can think, who can imagine, and who can write. . . . And the little thumb-nail sketches of the London streets have the grim force of a Callot.'
The World.— 'An exceedingly clever and daring work . . . a novel so weirdly fascinating and engrossing that the reader easily forgives its length. Its unflagging interest and strength, no less than its striking originality, both of design and treatment, will certainly rank it among the most notable novels of the season.'
JASPAR TRISTAM
By A. W. CLARKE
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Times.—'Mr. Clarke is familiar with school-life and writes about it amazingly well. The book deserves the attention of all who care for the finer qualities of fiction. The story is told with such delicate art, with so sure a knowledge of human nature, that we have read it from beginning to end with keen interest. Jaspar Tristram is a remarkable book.'
THE REBEL
By H. B. MARRIOTT WATSON
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Morning Post.—'The tale is full of incidents and dramatic situations; the result commands our unstinted admiration. It is an extraordinarily brilliant performance. Though full of the most subtle character-drawing, The Rebel is in the main a story of adventure. And these adventures are related with such sharpness of outline, they are so vivid, and the style of the author is so brilliant throughout, that were there not a character in the book worth a moment's consideration, it would still be well worth reading.'
RED ROCK
By THOMAS NELSON PAGE
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Morning Post.—'A story seething with incident and adventure. It reads like a chapter torn from the actual history of the times.'
The Academy.—'Red Rock is delicately fine. It is the expression of a gracious, benevolent, high-minded individuality. It has the sweet charm of "the old school," the dignity, the rare manners. It is honest, loving, and capable; and it has the faint, wistful charm of an antique time.'
THE AWKWARD AGE
By HENRY JAMES
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Outlook.— 'In The Awkward Age Mr. Henry Tames has surpassed himself.'
The Daily Chronicle.—'In delicacy of texture, his work, compared to the work of most, we are strongly inclined to say of all other novelists, is as a fabric woven of the finest spider's web to common huckaback. He suggests more by his reticences than he tells by his statements. . . . We should have to search far and wide in modern fiction to find artistry more finished, so consummate.'
THE TWO MAGICS
By HENRY JAMES
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Athenæum.— 'In The Two Magics, the first tale, "The Turn of the Screw," is one of the most engrossing and terrifying ghost stories we have ever read. The other story in the book, "Covering End," . . . is in its way excellently told.'
The Daily News.—'It is a masterpiece of artistic execution. Mr. James has lavished upon it all the resources and subtleties of his art. The workmanship throughout is exquisite in the precision of the touch, in the rendering of shades of spectral representation.'
THE SPOILS OF POYNTON
By HENRY JAMES
In One Volume, price 6s.
The National Observer.—'A work of brilliant fancy, of delicate humour, of gentle satire, of tragedy and comedy in appropriate admixture. We congratulate Mr. James without reserve upon the power, the delicacy, and the charm of a book of no common fascination.'
The Manchester Guardian.— 'Delightful reading. The old felicity of phrase and epithet, the quick, subtle flashes of insight, the fastidious liking for the best in character and art, are as marked as ever, and give one an intellectual pleasure for which one cannot be too grateful.'
THE OTHER HOUSE
By HENRY JAMES
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Daily News.—'A melodrama wrought with the exquisiteness of a madrigal. All the characters, however lightly sketched, are drawn with that clearness of insight, with those minute, accurate, unforeseen touches that tell of relentless observation.'
The Scotsman.—'A masterpiece of Mr. James's analytical genius and finished literary style. It also shows him at his dramatic best. He has never written anything in which insight and dramatic power are so marvellously combined with fine and delicate literary workmanship.'
WHAT MAISIE KNEW
By HENRY JAMES
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Academy.—'We have read this book with amazement and delight: with amazement at its supreme delicacy; with delight that its author retains an unswerving allegiance to literary conscience that forbids him to leave a slipshod phrase, or a single word out of its appointed place. There are many writers who can write dialogue that is amusing, convincing, real. But there is none who can reach Mr. James's extraordinary skill in tracing dialogue from the first vague impulse in the mind to the definite spoken word.'
EMBARRASSMENTS
By HENRY JAMES
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Times.—'Mr. James's stories are a continued protest against superficial workmanship and slovenly style. He is an enthusiast who has devoted himself to keeping alive the sacred fire of genuine literature; and he has his reward in a circle of constant admirers.'
The Daily News.—'Mr. Henry James is the Meissonier of literary art. In his new volume, we find all the exquisiteness, the precision of touch, that are his characteristic qualities. It is a curiously fascinating volume.'
The National Observer.—'The delicate art of Mr. Henry James has rarely been seen to more advantage than in these stories.'
The St. James's Gazette.—'All four stories are delightful for admirable workmanship, for nicety and precision of presentation, and "The Way it Came " is beyond question a masterpiece.'
TERMINATIONS
By HENRY JAMES
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Times.—'All the stories are told by a man whose heart and soul are in his profession of literature.'
The Athenæum.—'The appearance of Terminations will in no way shake the general belief in Mr. Henry James's accomplished touch and command of material. On the contrary, it confirms conclusions long since foregone, and will increase the respect of his readers. . . . With such passages of trenchant wit and sparkling observation, surely in his best manner, Mr. James ought to be as satisfied as his readers cannot fail to be.'
THE COUNTESS RADNA
By W. E. NORRIS
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Speaker.— 'In style, skill in construction, and general "go," it is worth a dozen ordinary novels.'
Black and White.—'The novel, like all Mr. Norris's work, is an excessively clever piece of work, and the author never for a moment allows his grasp of his plot and his characters to slacken.'
The Westminster Gazette.—'Mr. Norris writes throughout with much liveliness and force, saying now and then something that is worth remembering. And he sketches his minor characters with a firm touch.'
THE DANCER IN YELLOW
By W. E. NORRIS
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Guardian.—'A very clever and finished study of a dancer at one of the London theatres. We found the book very pleasant and refreshing, and laid it down with the wish that there were more like it.'
The World.—'The Dancer in Yellow takes us by surprise. The story is both tragic and pathetic. . . . We do not think he has written any more clever and skilful story than this one, and particular admiration is due to the byways and episodes of the narrative.'
THE WIDOWER
By W. E. NORRIS
In One Volume, price 6s.
St. James's Gazette.—'Mr. Norris's new story is one of his best. There is always about his novels an atmosphere of able authorship . . . and The Widower is handled throughout in the perfect manner to which Mr. Norris's readers are accustomed.'
Pall Mall Gazette.—'There is distinction of all kinds in every paragraph, and the whole is worthy of the delicately-finished details. Mr. Norris is always delightfully witty, clever, and unfailing in delicacy and point of style and manner, breezily actual, and briskly passing along. In a word, he is charming.'
MARIETTA'S MARRIAGE
By W. E. NORRIS
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Athenæum.—'A fluent style, a keen insight into certain types of human nature, a comprehensive and humorous view of modern society—these are gifts Mr. Norris has already displayed, and again exhibits in his present volume. From the first chapter to the last, the book runs smoothly and briskly, with natural dialogue and many a piquant situation.'
The Daily News.—'Every character in the book is dexterously drawn. Mr. Norris's book is interesting, often dramatic, and is the work of, if not a deep, a close and humorous observer of men and women.'
A VICTIM OF GOOD LUCK
By W. E. NORRIS
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Daily Chronicle.—'It has not a dull page from first to last. Any one with normal health and taste can read a book like this with real pleasure.'
The Spectator.—'The brightest and cleverest book which Mr. Norris has given us since he wrote The Rogue.'
The Saturday Review.—'Novels which are neither dull, unwholesome, morbid, nor disagreeable, are so rare in these days, that A Victim of Good Luck . . . ought to find a place in a book-box filled for the most part with light literature. . . . We think it will increase the reputation of an already very popular author.'
THE IMAGE BREAKERS
By GERTRUDE DIX
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Outlook.—'We have here a book packed with thought, suggestive, sincere. The story is told supremely well. It has construction, it has atmosphere. The characters live, breathe, love, suffer. Everything is on the high plane of literature. It is a book of absorbing interest.'
THE GODS ARRIVE
By ANNIE E. HOLDSWORTH
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Daily Telegraph.—'Packed full of cleverness: the minor personages are instinct with comedy.'
The Daily Chronicle.—'The book is well written, the characters keenly observed, the incidents neatly presented.'
The Queen.—'A book to linger over and enjoy.'
THE YEARS THAT THE LOCUST HATH EATEN
By ANNIE E. HOLDSWORTH
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Standard.—'A worthy successor to Joanna Traill, Spinster. It is quite as powerful. It has insight and sympathy and pathos, humour, and some shrewd understanding of human nature scattered up and down its pages. Moreover, there is beauty in the story and idealism. . . . Told with a humour, a grace, a simplicity, that ought to give the story a long reign. . . . The charm of the book is undeniable; it is one that only a clever woman, full of the best instincts of her sex, could have written.'
THE VALLEY OF THE GREAT SHADOW
By ANNIE E. HOLDSWORTH
In One Volume, price 6s.
The World.—'The story, in which there are many beautiful descriptive passages, is so human and sympathetic, so full of the comprehension and love of nature, and shows such real humour too, that it cannot fail to arouse and maintain interest.'
PHASES OF AN INFERIOR PLANET
BY ELLEN GLASGOW
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Literary World.—'The extraordinary sincerity of parts of the book, especially that dealing with Mariana's early married life, the photographic directness with which the privations, the monotony, the dismal want of all that makes marriage and motherhood beautiful, and of all that Mariana's colour-loving nature craved, is pictured, are quite out of the common.'
THE VOICE OF THE PEOPLE
By ELLEN GLASGOW
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Times.—'It has many things to recommend it. Miss Glasgow has written a clever and interesting book. Her characters are all alive. She suggests their Southern States environment with a vivid pen. Her negroes are capital. A story dealing even lightly with politics that permits itself to be read is a rarity. Miss Glasgow has achieved the difficult task, and the latter part of her book, which is the political part, is, if anything, the more interesting.'
THE WHITE TERROR
By FÉLIX GRAS
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Spectator.—'The fascination of The Reds of the Midi and The Terror is exerted with equal force and charm in their brilliant sequel, The White Terror. Few narratives in modern fiction are more thrilling. M. Gras has the gift of achieving the most vivid and poignant results by a method devoid of artifice or elaboration. The narrative is a masterpiece of simplicity and naïveté: a stirring and richly coloured recital.'
The Daily Chronicle.—'The book is full of living pictures. The feverishness, the uncertainty, of everything and everybody are most powerfully brought out.'
THE TERROR
By FÉLIX GRAS
In One Volume, price 6s.
The Pall Mall Gazette.—'Those who shared Mr. Gladstone's admiration for The Reds of the Midi will renew it when they read The Terror. It is a stirring and vivid story, full of perilous and startling adventures, and without one interval of dulness. . . . It excites and absorbs the reader's attention. The excitement grows with the development of the plot, and the incidents are told with much spirit.'
GABRIELE D'ANNUNZIO'S NOVELS
W. L. Courtney in the Daily Telegraph.—D'Annunzio is one of the great artistic energies of the age. He is the incarnation of the Latin genius just as Rudyard Kipling is the incarnation of the Anglo-Saxon genius. He has invented new harmonies of prose.
In One Volume, price 6s. each
THE FLAME OF LIFE
The Pall Mall Gazette.—'A work of genius, unique, astounding. There are passages that sweep one headlong, and the whole leaves an indelible impression.'
The Standard.—'The pages are rich in symbolic imagery, in beautiful word-pictures of Venice, and are saturated by the spirit of the Renaissance in its most luxurious form.'
THE CHILD OF PLEASURE
The Academy.—'. . . Clever, subtle, to the point of genius.'
The Daily Mail.—'A powerful study of passion, masterly of its kind.'
The Daily Graphic.—'The poetic beauty and richness of the language make it a sensuous, glowing poem in prose.'
The Scotsman.—'The strength of the book lies in the intensity with which the writer brings out the pleasures and pains of his creatures.'
THE VICTIM
The Pall Mall Gazette.—'No word but "genius" will fit his analysis of the mental history of the faithless husband.'
The Daily Chronicle.—'The book contains many descriptive passages of rare beauty—passages which by themselves are lovely little prose lyrics. . . . It is a self-revelation; the revelation of the sort of self that D'Annunzio delineates with a skill and knowledge so extraordinary. The soul of the man, raw, bruised, bleeding, is always before us.'
THE TRIUMPH OF DEATH
The Pall Mall Gazette.—'A masterpiece. The story holds and haunts one. Unequalled even by the great French contemporary whom, in his realism, D'Annunzio most resembles, is the account of the pilgrimage to the shrine of the Virgin by the sick, deformed, and afflicted. It is a great prose poem, that, of its kind, cannot be surpassed. Every detail of the scene is brought before us in a series of word-pictures of wonderful power and vivid colouring, and the ever-recurring refrain Viva Maria! Maria Evviva! rings in our ears as we lay down the book. It is the work of a master, whose genius is beyond dispute.'
THE VIRGINS OF THE ROCKS
The Daily Chronicle.—'He writes beautifully, and this book, by the way, is most admirably translated. The picture he presents of these three princesses in their sun-baked, mouldering, sleepy palace is, as we look back upon it, strangely impressive and even haunting.'
THE DOLLAR LIBRARY OF AMERICAN FICTION
A New Volume is published each month, price Two Guineas,post free, for a Subscription of Twelve Volumes,or separately in Special BindingFour Shillings per Volume.
The following Volumes are now ready, and others will follow at regular monthly intervals:—
THE GIRL AT THE HALF-WAY HOUSE
By E. HOUGH
PARLOUS TIMES
By DAVID DWIGHT WELLS
HER MOUNTAIN LOVER
By HAMLIN GARLAND
THE CHRONIC LOAFER
By NELSON LLOYD
LORDS OF THE NORTH
By AGNES C. LAUT
THE DARLINGTONS
By E. E. PEAKE
SISTER CARRIE
By THEODORE DREISER
THE DIARY OF A FRESHMAN
By C. MACOMB FLANDRAU
A DRONE AND A DREAMER
By NELSON LLOYD
London: WILLIAM HEINEMANN, 21 Bedford Street, W.C.