_A Selection from the Catalogue of_
G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS
Blue Aloes
By Cynthia Stockley
Author of "Poppy," "The Claw," "Wild Honey," etc.
No writer can so unfailingly summons and materialize the spirit of theweird, mysterious South Africa as can Cynthia Stockley. She is a favoredmedium through whom the great Dark Continent its tales unfolds.
A strange story is this, of a Karoo farm,--a hedge of Blue Aloes, acactus of fantastic beauty, which shelters a myriad of creepingthings,--a whisper and a summons in the dead of the night,--an odor ofdeath and the old.
There are three other stories in the book, stories throbbing with thesudden, intense passion and the mystic atmosphere of the Veldt.
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Unconquered
By Maud Diver
Author of "Captain Desmond, V.C.," "Desmond's Daughter," "The GreatAmulet," etc.
In this book, Maud Diver proves that she needs no Indian backgroundagainst which to work a powerful and emotional drama. This novel iscalled by the author, "an episode of 1914," and is the story of avigorous out-of-doors man who, severely wounded, is brought home in theearly days of the war, and of the girl who is repelled by the physicalimperfections of her one-time handsome and sturdy lover. The other sortof girl is also in this tale, the slacker and the pacifist. It is astrong story, admirably told by a master novelist.
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Desmond's Daughter
By
Maud Diver
"_Desmond's Daughter_ is an Anglo-Indian novel of much more than ordinary importance. As a study of a complex character it has remarkable power.... Mrs. Diver understands the English officer thoroughly and does not spare his weaknesses; but that she appreciates his good points is shown in her true and vivid story of the Tirah Campaign. It is this which gives the book the right to be regarded as an historical novel of first importance; and there is no more striking illustration of our methods of governing and holding our Indian Empire than this stimulating and convincing story."--_Aberdeen Free Press._
"The present War is not mentioned in these pages; yet the spirit of England at war is in them, the spirit of those clean-cut young Englishmen, who know so well how to die.... There is more than entertainment in Mrs. Diver's books; more than serious interest, though they have much of both. In them speaks England's faith in her sons and daughters; in the qualities which have made her race great and powerful and fit to endure." _New York Tribune._
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GREATHEART
By Ethel M. Dell
There were two of them--as unlike as two men could be. Sir Eustace, big,domineering, haughty, used to sweeping all before him with the power ofhis personality.
The other was Stumpy, small, insignificant, quiet, with a little limp.
They clashed over the greatest question that may come to men--the loveof a girl.
She took Sir Eustace just because she could not help herself--and wasswept ahead on the tide of his passion.
And then, when she needed help most--on the day before thewedding--Stumpy saved her--and the quiet flame of his eyes was more thanthe brute power of his brother.
How did it all come out? Did she choose wisely? Is Greatheart more to bedesired than great riches? The answer is the most vivid and charmingstory that Ethel M. Dell has written in a long time.
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