20 JULY 1895, page 25

Messrs. Hodder And Stoughton Have Published An Edition De...

of Mr. J. M. Barrie's Auld Licht Idylls. It is beautifully printed on large paper; but the most notable feature of it is the illustrations, which have been executed by Mr.......

Early Venetian Printing Illustrated. (nimmo.) — This Is A...

the Venetian house of Ongania. It contains some two hundred pages of reproductions of famous examples of the early art of printing and book-decoration at Venice. It will be......

Transition. By The Author Of "a Superfluous Woman."...

in many respects, a pleasanter and more wholesome book than "A Superfluous Woman," perhaps because -it deals more with questions of the spirit and less with problems -of the......

The White King's Daughter (seeley And Co.) Is One Of

those pleasing and picturesque historical romances which Mrs. Emma Marshall produces with positively marvellous facility. There are no signs of falling off in this story of......

The Kindergarten At Home. By Emily A. E. Shirreff. (abbott,

-Jones, and Co.)—This is the fourth edition, revised and illustrated, of an excellent and eminently practical little manual, which has -done not a little to introduce into......

The English Illustrated Has Descended To The Commonest...

illustrations. The present number contains a story by Mr. George Gissing.—The Portfolio for the month is an account of the Isle of Wight, by Mr. C. J. Cornish.—The Century......

The Temple Of Deir El Bahari. Introductory Memoir By Edouard

Neville, D.Litt. (Kegan Paul, Trench, and Co.)—M. Neville tells us in this Memoir (the twelfth of the series published by the Egypt Exploration Fund) about the previous efforts......

The Annals Of St. Olave's, Hart Street, And All Hallows,

Staining. ' By the Rev. Alfred Povah, D.D. (Blades, East, and Blades.)— Dr. Povah is Rector of the United Parishes (united in 1870). He has been Rector of St. Olave's since......

In The Magazine Of Art, The Edibr Grinds On Through

the .Academy, distributing praises on all hands which are mutually destructive. Mr. Gosse urges, in the first of a series of articles, the claims of sculpture. Two things, it......