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th and, the completeness of their revelations. Life behind the scenes is stripped bare of all its glamor. Young women whom the stage attracts should read this story. There is a ringing damnation in it. =MRS. DRUMMOND'S VOCATION, by Mark Ryce= Lily Drummond is an unmoral (not immoral) heroine. She was not a bad girl at heart; but when chance opened up for her the view of a life she had never known or dreamed of, her absence of moral responsibility did the rest. =DOWNWARD: "A Slice of Life," by Maud Churton Braby= Author of "Modern Marriage and How to Bear It." "'Downward' belongs to that great modern school of fiction built upon woman's downfall. * * * I cordially commend this bit of fiction to the thousands of young women who are yearning to see what they call life.'"--_James L. Ford in the N. Y. Herald_. =TWO APACHES OF PARIS, by Alice and Claude Askew= Authors of "The Shulamite," "The Rod of Justice," etc. All primal struggles originate with the daughters of Eve. This story of Paris and London tells of the wild, fierce life of the flesh, of a woman with the beauty of consummate vice to whom a man gave himself, body and soul. =THE VISITS OF ELIZABETH, by Elinor Glyn= One of Mrs. Glyn's biggest successes. Elizabeth is a charming young woman who is always saying and doing droll and, daring things, both shocking and amusing. =BEYOND THE ROCKS, by Elinor Glyn= "One of Mrs. Glyn's highly sensational and somewhat erotic novels."--_Boston Transcript_. The scenes are laid in Paris and London; and a country-house party also figures, affording the author some daring situations, which she has handled deftly. =THE REFLECTIONS OF AMBROSINE, by Elinor Glyn= The story of the awakening of a young girl, whose maidenly emotions are set forth as Elinor Glyn alone knows how. "Gratitude and, power and self-control! * * * in nature I find there is a stronger force than all these things, and that is the touch of the one we love."--Ambrosine. =THE VICISSITUDES OF EVANGELINE, by Elinor Glyn= "One of Mrs. Glyn's most pungent tales of feminine idiosyncracy and caprice."--Boston Transcript, Evangeline is a delightful heroine with glorious red hair and amazing eyes that looked a thousand unsaid challenges. =DAYBREAK: a Prologue to "Three Weeks"= "Daybreak" is a prologue to "Three Weeks" and forms the first of the series, although published last. It is a highly interesting account of a love episod
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