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rm with the red blood of romance and melodrama."--_Boston Transcript._ Davis--A Friend of Caesar. By William Stearns Davis. "There are many incidents so vivid, so brilliant, that they fix themselves in the memory."--Nancy Huston Banks in _The Bookman._ Drummond--The Justice of the King. By Hamilton Drummond. "Read the story for the sake of the living, breathing people, the adventures, but most for the sake of the boy who served love and the King."--_Chicago Record-Herald._ Elizabeth and Her German Garden. "It is full of nature in many phases--of breeze and sunshine, of the glory of the land, and the sheer joy of living."--_New York Times._ Gale--Loves of Pelleas and Etarre. By Zona Gale. " ... full of fresh feeling and grace of style, a draught from the fountain of youth."--_Outlook._ Herrick--The Common Lot. By Robert Herrick. "A story of present-day life, intensely real in its picture of a young architect whose ideals in the beginning were, at their highest, aesthetic rather than spiritual. It is an unusual novel of great interest." London--Adventure. By Jack London. "No reader of Jack London's stories need be told that this abounds with romantic and dramatic incident."--_Los Angeles Tribune._ London--Burning Daylight. By Jack London. "Jack London has outdone himself in 'Burning Daylight.'"--_The Springfield Union._ Loti--Disenchanted. By Pierre Loti. "It gives a more graphic picture of the life of the rich Turkish women of to-day than anything that has ever been written."--_Brooklyn Daily Eagle._ Lucas--Mr. Ingleside. By E.V. Lucas. "He displays himself as an intellectual and amusing observer of life's foibles with a hero characterized by inimitable kindness and humor."--_The Independent._ Mason--The Four Feathers. By A.E.W. Mason. "'The Four Feathers' is a first-rate story, with more legitimate thrills than any novel we have read in a long time."--_New York Press._ Norris--Mother. By Kathleen Norris. "Worth its weight in gold."--_Catholic Columbian._ Oxenham--The Long Road. By John Oxenham. "'The Long Road' is a tragic, heart-gripping story of Russian political and social conditions."--_The Craftsman._ Pryor--The Colonel's Story. By Mrs. Roger A. Pryor. "The story is one in which the spirit of the Old South figures largely; adventure and romance have their play and carry the plot to a satisfying end." Remington--Ermine of the Yello
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