22 DECEMBER 1917, Page 15

AHAnAHLfi NoVols. — In Another Girl's Shoes. By Berta Ruck. (Hodder and

Stoughton. 984—Though this account of an involun- tary impersonation is not very probable, it is enterta' • g reading. —Cinderella Jane. By Marjorie Benton Cooke. (Jarrolds. Os.)—An American story of a marriage of convenience. It illustrates some of the difficulties which arise from marriage being considered as a social contract terminable by inclination.— Women's Great Adventure. By Arabella Kent:tidy. (Hurst and Blackett. 1384—If the birth of a child is to be called, as is very just, " woman's great adventure," it suggests that the choosing of the child's father should not be so "lightly awl inadvisedly " undertaken as is the case in Miss Kenenly'e story.