Good Words. Edited by the Very Rev. Donald Macleod, D.D.
(Isbiater and Co. 7s. Gd.)—The Sunday Magazine. (Same pub- lishers. 7s. Gd.)—These two companion volumes will receive, we are sure, their customary welcome. They hold, and more than hold, their own among the multitude of rival magazines. The serial story in the former is " The Shoes of Fortune," by Neil Munro ; in the latter "The Winds of Cathi igg," by Christabel Coleridge. Both give us a number of interesting papers, bio- graphical and autobiographical. In Good Words we see the names of Lewis Carroll and Mary Kingsley ; in the Sunday Magazine of Bishop Creighton, the Empress Frederick, and Miss Charlotte Yonge. Miss c. Coleridge contributes a "Personal Reminis- cence" of Miss Yonge, which is particularly interesting. Young people think that they have grown out of Miss Yonge. Possibly they have, but they are not the better for it. We would specially mention the "Religious Papers—Biblical and Prac- tical " in the latter magazine.