will stir the blood of the coldest, and whole chapters charged with
a magic and a charm. It is a real romance, full of vigour and a
clean, healthy life."
TOMMY CARTERET. 6s.
THE DAILY CHRONICLE.--"This is a fine book, thoroughly fine from
start to finish. We willingly place our full store of compliments
on Mr. Forman's splendid and successful book."
BUCHANAN'S WIFE. 6s.
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH.--"'Buchanan's Wife' may be regarded as another
success for an already successful author. It contains all the
elements to attract, and is written in such a graceful manner that
the reader is held delighted and enthralled to the end."
A MODERN ULYSSES. 6s.
PEOPLE'S SATURDAY JOURNAL.--"Full of exciting incidents handled in
a bright, crisp style."
THE QUEST. 6s.
A tense, emotional and romantic drama, surpassing in interest even
that notably successful novel and play "The Garden of Lies" by the
same author.
HAROLD BINDLOSS
THE LIBERATIONIST 6s.
MORNING LEADER.--"This is the author's best novel, and is one which
no lover of healthy excitement ought to miss."
HAWTREY'S DEPUTY. 6s.
The action of this novel once again takes place in Canada--a
country he has made especially his own--and in this story is a plot
of quite unusual power and interest.
LOUIS TRACY
A FATAL LEGACY. 6s.
THE SCOTSMAN.--"In all the annals of fiction a more ingenious or
startlingly original plot has not been recorded."
RAINBOW ISLAND. 6s.
THE LITERARY WORLD.--"Those who delight in tales of adventure
should hail 'Rainbow Island' with joyous shouts of welcome. Rarely
have we met with more satisfying fare of this description than in
its pages."
THE ALBERT GATE AFFAIR. 6s.
THE BIRMINGHAM POST.--"will Worthily Rank With 'the Fatal Legacy'
And 'rainbow Island' Both Books Full of Wholesome Excitement and
Told With Great Ability. The Present Volume Is an Excellent
Detective Tale, Brimful of Adventure. Told in Mr. Tracy's Best
Style."
THE PILLAR OF LIGHT. 6s.
THE EVENING STANDARD.--"so Admirable, So Living, So Breathlessly
Exciting a Book. The Magnificent Realism of the Lighthouse and Its
Perils, The Intense Conviction of the Author, That Brings the Very
Scene He Pictures Before the Reader's Eyes With Hardly a Line of
Detached Description, The Inter
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