RKADABLE NOVILS.—The Doings of Berengaria. By Shelland Bradley. (George Bell
and Sons. 6s.)—Berengaria is the usual Anglo-Indian lady who leads a whole station by the nose and enjoys a variety of adventures. Some of these are exceedingly enter- taining, but it must be confessed that others are rather pointless. —His Own People. By Booth Tarkington. (John Murray. 28. 6d.)—This little sketch is the story of an innocent American whose excessive longing for "smart" society leads to his being fleeced by a set of sharpers.—The Unpardonable Sin. By James Douglas. (E. Grant Richards. 6s.)—A study of life in its religious aspect, powerful, though with no little exaggeration. —The Love Story of Giraldus. By Alice Cunninghame. (F. Griffiths. 6s.)—" A romance of the twelfth century."—Lady Anne's Trustee, and other Stories. By Florence Warden. (F. V. White and Co. 6s.)—Nine ingeniously constructed stories.