READABLE NOVELS.—Drusilla's Point of View. By Madame Albanesi. (Hurst and
Blackett. 6s.)—An amusing modern story. Most people, however, will think that Drusilla's action, the result of her " point of view," was a little hard upon the man she was engaged to.—His Final Flutter. By Henry Potts. (Chatto and Windus. 6s.)—A racing novel with exciting incidents. The stable containing the horse which is to restore the hero's for tunes is the object of a conspiracy by unscrupulous persons.---Imperial Brown of Brizton. By Reginald Turner. (Chapman and Hall. 6s.)—An amusing story of the sojourn of a young draper in France, and of the way in Which he is hoaxed by a set of adventurers.—Bertrand of Brittany. By Warwick Deeping. (Harper and Brothers. 6s.)—A graphic account of the early days of Bertrand du Gueselin.—"I Little Knew—" By May Crommelin. (John Milne. 6s.)—One of the mixtures of tale and travel which find, it would seem, a good many readers nowa- days.—Mr. Bailey's Debts. By Charles Eddy. (Cassell and Co. 6s.)—A quite amusing story of the Turf and its parasites.--The Winged Lion. By L. Winstanley. (Hutchinson and Co. 64.)— A powerfully told story of present-day life with an out-of-the- way plot.