READABLE NOVELS.—Chateau Royal. By J. H. Yoxall. (Smith, Elder, and
Co. 6s.)—The story in its earlier part is a little, in fact more than a little, hard to understand ; any one who struggles on will be repaid.—The Shadow of a Vendetta. By Archibald C. Gunter. (Ward, Lock, and Co. 6s.)—" Mr. Barnes of New York" is a well-known personage in fiction. It is entertaining to see the author dealing with the complications of a vendetta.—Lady Julia's Emerald. By Helen Hester Colvill. (John Lane. 6s.)—A modern story in which fashionable spiritualism plays a consider- able part. —Lady Athlyne. By Bram Stoker. (W. Heinemann. 6s.)—A novel in which the author has chosen an impossible and unconvincing situation ; but this once granted, he must be acknowledged to have developed his plot successfully.—Restitu- tion. By Dorothea Gerard. (John Long. 6s.)—This is a story of Russia's beneficent work in Lithuania. The heroine is Katya, who has inherited her property from a Russian grandfather ; the hero is a Swigello, one of the race that once owned it. It is a very spirited story.—Diana of Dobson's. By Cicely Hamilton. (Collier and Co. is. net.)