READABLE NOVELS.—Lord Cammarleigh's Secret. By Roy Horniman. (Chatto and Windus.
6s.)—A ludicrously impossible story of modern life. It is, however, amusingly told.--Ths Master Knot. By Alice Birkhead. (John Lane. Os.)—A stoty of a marriage of convenience, in which the scene is chiefly laid in Ireland.—Neither Storehouse nor Barn. By Allen Rehm. (Hutchinson and Co. 6s.)—A Welsh story with some charming descriptions of a journey taken by the hero and heroine on foot —Ann Hyde, Travelling Companion. By Annie S. Swan (Hodder and Stoughton. 3s. 6d.)—The adventures of a young lady left without resources of her own. The book is rather discon- nected, because each section is complete in itself.—The Terror of the Macdurghotts. By C. E. Playne. (T. Fisher Unwin. Os.) —The story of a modern feud as bitter as that of Capulet and Montague. The description of scenery in the islands of the North is picturesquely done.