A SELECTED LIST OF FICTION
   _BY ALGERNON BLACKWOOD_
   THE EMPTY HOUSE
        THE MORNING POST: "No one will read this book without dread     ... exceedingly well done ... everyone who has a shelf for     the horrible in his library will welcome it and give it its     place."
        THE MORNING LEADER: "There is a dreadful fascination about     these clever yet unpretentious stories. We have seldom met     ghostly fiction which has fulfilled its end more     adequately."
   _BY CHARLES MARRIOTT_
   MRS. ALEMERE'S ELOPEMENT
        THE DAILY CHRONICLE: "'Mrs. Alemere's Elopement' is a work     of art.... An outstanding novel."
   WOMEN AND THE WEST
        THE ACADEMY: "Whatever he produces bears the hall-mark of     his subtle mind. We believe that if he honestly tried for a     month, he could not write anything that was stale in     thought, stale in character and phrase."
   THE LAPSE OF VIVIEN EADY
        THE TIMES: "As a writer Mr. Marriott increases in virtue. We     have never known his prose so good, whether in description,     dialogue, or analysis."
        THE MORNING POST: "It seems to us that 'The Lapse of Vivien     Eady' is distinctly the best book he has hitherto produced.     The characters are excellently well drawn ... and the book     is full of delicate impressions of the aspects of sea and     sky and moorland."
   THE REMNANT
        THE PALL MALL GAZETTE: "Nothing is more reassuring to the     student of literature than to watch, in the midst of the     careless rise and fall of so many reputations, the steady     advance of such a novelist as Mr. Marriott. It is     unnecessary to argue that fiction is a true and living and     important branch of English literature when it numbers among     its younger exponents such men as the author of 'The     Remnant.' We welcome this book as an addition to the small     body of good psychological fiction in English."
   THE WONDROUS WIFE _Second Edition_
        THE WESTMINSTER GAZETTE: "The story has something of the     Greek grandeur, simplicity and inevitableness. The plot is     woven with the greatest skill; there is a directness in the     construction which is masterly."
        THE TIMES: "There are few living novelists who show signs of     thinking out things so broadly and independently as Mr.     Marriott in this book.... Well constructed, interesting, and     moving, and the characters are full of life.... Mr.     Marriott's dialogue is admirable."
   THE KISS OF HELEN
        THE MORNING POST: "In sympathetic interpretation of     character, in skilful analysis of situation, and in     dexterity of dialogue, he is at his high-water mark."
        THE DAILY GRAPHIC: "The best novel Mr. Marriott has written     since 'The Column.'"
   _BY RENE BAZIN_
   THE NUN _Fifth Edition_ _With Frontispiece in Photogravure by Harold Copping_
        THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: "It is difficult to speak in measured     terms of this book.... A consummate artist, his work eats     into the heart and lives in the memory as do but few books     from modern authors."
        THE DAILY MAIL: "'The Nun' is a novel of great beauty and     distinction."
        THE DAILY CHRONICLE: "Told with a power and simplicity that     are beyond all words of praise.... Beautiful, extremely     beautiful."
        THE STANDARD: "Nothing can be more tender, more delicate,     more sensitively artistic."
        THE MORNING POST: "The book is full of poignant moments ...     a noble and ennobling study in human idealism."
        THE WESTMINSTER GAZETTE: "A book which no one who reads it     will ever forget."
        THE EVENING STANDARD: "We have discovered in it an absorbing     interest--the interest which comes of humanity skilfully     moulded by art, of essential truth and fine perception.... A     very powerful piece of work."
        THE SATURDAY REVIEW: "It is a pitiful and poignant story,     rich in real drama and arresting by its fidelity to the     truths of life."
        THE DAILY GRAPHIC: "A master-work of fiction."
   _BY J. S. FLETCHER_
   MR. POSKITT
        THE ATHENAEUM: "Mr. Poskitt is an altogether delightful     creation."
        THE SKETCH: "Mr. Fletcher's characters are always the     characters of life, and it is pleasant to think that there     are still Mr. Poskitts in this money-seeking, hurrying and     scurrying world of work."
        THE PALL MALL GAZETTE: "The Yorkshire farmer is a     picturesque type, and Mr. Poskitt is certainly very pleasant     company. There is attraction in his kindliness, his taste     for good living, his liberal yet practical judgment of men     and things, and his dialect, which the author administers     with discretion. This is not a novel, but a series of     sketches from a quiet life, cleverly strung together, and we     have not met with anything from Mr. Fletcher's pen that is     more thoroughly enjoyable."
   THE HARVEST MOON _Ready Shortly_
   _BY OLIVER ONIONS_
   PEDLAR'S PACK
        THE DAILY EXPRESS: "A charming volume."
   _BY ALPHONSE COURLANDER_
   SETH OF THE CROSS
        THE MORNING POST: "A powerful story."
        THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: "There is genuine and unforced pathos     in the narrative of Seth Craddock's struggle against fate."
        THE PALL MALL GAZETTE: "A good book that should have a     popular as well as an artistic success."
   _BY MRS. PHILIP CHAMPION DE CRESPIGNY_
   THE GREY DOMINO
        THE PALL MALL GAZETTE: "A well-told romance of scenes laid     in France at a time when the horrors of St. Bartholomew were     still a vivid recollection, swords flashed freely at sight     of a foe, and adventures were to be had for less than the     asking."
        THE DAILY MAIL: "This is a brisk romance of the days of     Henri Quatre, what time de Rosny was in authority. It has,     however, little to do with politics, for which readers will     be grateful, and a good deal with love and adventures."
   THE ROSE BROCADE
        THE BOOKMAN: "A book which will most deservedly find many     delighted readers."
   THE SPANISH PRISONER _Second Edition_
        THE SCOTSMAN: "Recent romantic fiction has few more charming     heroines than Paloma Cuevedos."
   _BY WARWICK DEEPING_
   THE SEVEN STREAMS
        THE MORNING POST: "'The Seven Streams' is a fine tale ...     full of strong emotions.... Picturesque description is Mr.     Deeping's special gift, and he has it in large measure."
   _BY CULLEN GOULDSBURY_
   GOD'S OUTPOST
        THE TRIBUNE: "The writer gives a vivid account of South     African life, painting it in no glowing colours. He touches     firmly on the medley of conflicting elements. From many     points of view the book has great merits--indeed, it very     narrowly escapes being relegated to a much higher place."
   CIRCE'S GARDEN
   _BY BEATRICE GRIMSHAW_
   VAITI OF THE ISLANDS
        THE SPECTATOR: "Extremely virile.... A writer of more than     ordinary promise."
        VANITY FAIR: "A good book.... The setting is wonderful, and     Beatrice Grimshaw knows how to make it interest us.... I read the     book from cover to cover with pleasure."
   _BY WILLIAM LE QUEUX_
    THE INVASION OF 1910
    THE COUNT'S CHAUFFEUR _Second Edition_
    THE WOMAN IN THE WAY _Second Edition_
    THE LADY IN THE CAR
   _BY FRANK RICHARDSON_
   BUNKUM _Third Edition_
        THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: "A real gem."
        THE DAILY MAIL: "Hilariously funny."
        THE DAILY EXPRESS: "Will make you laugh like anything."
        THE EVENING STANDARD: "A perfect _crescendo_ of fun."
   THE WORST MAN IN THE WORLD
        THE TIMES: "As full of witticisms and as irrepressible as     ever."
        THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: "Extremely funny. A feast of fun an 
					     					 			d     frolic."
        THE PALL MALL GAZETTE: "Once again and more, we think, than     ever he will be found irresistible."
   THE OTHER MAN'S WIFE _Shortly_
   _BY F. C. PHILIPS_
   THE DEAN AND HIS DAUGHTER
       THE TIMES: "The cruelty with which the world treats a    divorced woman was perhaps never illustrated so powerfully or    with such sarcasm as in this straightforward narrative, told    by the victim herself without a complaint or a single cry of    indignation."
   AS IN A LOOKING GLASS
   _BY PERCY WHITE_
   THE TRIUMPH OF MRS. ST. GEORGE
       THE ATHENAEUM: "In none of the novels that have gone to make    his reputation as a satirist of certain phases of West-End    life is the dialogue more sparkling or the character-drawing    more vivacious."
   THE COUNTESS AND THE KING'S DIARY
   MR. STRUDGE
       THE MORNING POST: "By far the ablest piece of work that Mr.    Percy White has yet done."
       THE GLOBE: "Undoubtedly this is the best thing Mr. White has done."
   _BY HORACE ANNESLEY VACHELL_
   A DRAMA IN SUNSHINE
        THE WORLD: "Wholly admirable."
        THE LIVERPOOL COURIER: "An excellent story characterised by     that breadth and strength which have given Mr. Vachell so     prominent a place among our novelists."
   THE PROCESSION OF LIFE
        THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: "So well written, so true to life, so     instinct with quaint wisdom and quiet humour as to stand     apart from the current fiction of the hour. There is a true     savour of literature about it.... The story, simple and     truthful, is as delightful as the people who figure in it.     Mr. Vachell's book is one to get and to read, and, when     read, to keep for reading again."
   _BY HERBERT FLOWERDEW_
   MAYNARD'S WIVES
        VANITY FAIR: "Maynard was a man who got his marriages inextricably     entangled. It was not altogether his fault: his first wife should     have been more open with him. If she had not been a bigamist, he     would not have been a bigamist.... He was a self-indulgent weakling     of the most despicable kind; and Mr. Flowerdew has worked out his     character with considerable skill."
   THE THIRD KISS
   _BY RITA_
   THE POINTING FINGER _Second Edition_
   THE MILLIONAIRE GIRL _Second Edition_
   _BY MRS. HAROLD E. GORST_
   THE THIEF ON THE CROSS _Second Edition_
        THE EVENING STANDARD: "By far the best and ablest book its     author has yet written."
   BY _EDGAR JEPSON_
   THE ADMIRABLE TINKER
   _BY JAMES BLYTH_
   DEBORAH'S LIFE
   LAWFUL ISSUE
        THE TRIBUNE: "Mr. Blyth's new novel may be recommended as a     strong and bracing tonic to those who find themselves in a     state of mental debilitation after a long course of     contemporary fiction reading."
        THE DAILY CHRONICLE: "A remarkable achievement."
   _BY G. B. BURGIN_
   WHICH WOMAN
        THE OUTLOOK: "It is an unusual and at moments a powerful     book. The conception of a woman of the kind that would make     so desperate a fight for her own happiness as Marion in this     novel is well and boldly carried out."
   GALAHAD'S GARDEN
        THE SCOTSMAN: "Mr. Burgin at his best."
   _BY FORD MADOX HUEFFER_
   THE FIFTH QUEEN CROWNED
   _BY MORICE GERARD_
   A GENTLEMAN OF LONDON
   THE PURSUER _Shortly_
   _BY S. R. CROCKETT_
   THE BLOOM O' THE HEATHER _Shortly_
   _BY MORLEY ROBERTS_
   RACHEL MARR _Second Edition_
        THE MORNING POST: "Mr. Morley Roberts' finest achievement."
        THE ACADEMY: "Beautifully conceived. She is a fine idea."
        VANITY FAIR: "A fine novel. It raises its author to a high     place."
        THE QUEEN: "One of the most remarkable novels of the     generation."
        THE WESTMINSTER GAZETTE: "Mr. Roberts has drawn his heroine     greatly, on magnificent lines."
        THE SCOTSMAN: "The work of a genius."
   CAPTAIN BALAAM OF "THE CORMORANT" _Crown 8vo, 3s. 6d._
        THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: "A book of smiles."
        THE PALL MALL GAZETTE: "Here ... we see the sons of the wave     in good-humoured spirits, and capital company they are."
   THE PROMOTION OF THE ADMIRAL _Second Edition, crown 8vo, 3s. 6d._
        THE SPECTATOR: "Very delightful as well as very unusual."
        VANITY FAIR: "The liveliest sea stories I know."
        THE REFEREE: "The Admiral is a character ... fresh,     original, and immensely diverting."
   THE BLUE PETER _Second Edition_
        THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: "For a book of sea stories delightfully     fresh and humorous it would be difficult to beat 'The Blue     Peter.'"
        THE ATHENAEUM: "Mr. Roberts is out for a lark in this book,     and a lark he has."
   THE RED BURGEE
        THE MORNING POST: "Mr. Morley Roberts is quite at his     best.... There is not a single story in the book which is     not worth reading, and we cordially recommend 'The Red     Burgee.'"
        THE STANDARD: "We should be genuinely sorry if we thought     that anyone who loved the sea missed reading this book."
   PAINTED ROCK
        THE STANDARD: "This is unquestionably the most powerful,     vigorous, and impressive book of short stories that Mr.     Morley Roberts has ever written, good as is the record that     lies behind him.... The great things of human nature start     up at every point and confront you boldly."
   CAPTAIN SPINK
        THE GLOBE: "Every page is full of entertainment."
        THE STANDARD: "A perfect mine of laughter."
        THE EVENING STANDARD: "He is something of a joy."
   _A Complete List of Mr. Eveleigh Nash's Publications will be sent postfree on receipt of a postcard._
   _Note Address:_
    FAWSIDE HOUSE, KING STREET, COVENT GARDEN, LONDON, W.C.
   BALLANTYNE AND CO. LTD., TAVISTOCK STREET, LONDON, W.C.
   TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE:
   Minor changes have been made to correct typesetters' errors; otherwise,every effort has been made to remain true to the author's words andintent.      
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