READABLE NOVELS.—Blessington's Folly. By Theodore Goodridge Roberts. (John Long. 6s.)—A
capital, if slightly monotonous, story of life in Labrador.—Duke Jones. By Ethel Sidgwick. (Sidgwick and Jackson. 6s.)—This sequel to A Lady of Leisure approaches more nearly to the high level of the writer's earlier work. It is full of interest and of subtlety, and finely written.—The Woman in the Bazaar. By Alice Perrin. (Cassell and Co. 3s. 6d.)—A little sketch of an officer in India, whose inflexibility and lack of sympathy wreck the happiness of his first marriage and endanger that of his second.—The Path. By Edmund White. (Methuen and Co. 6s.)—Mr. W bite's book is scarcely a novel: it is a series of careful, leisurely studies of Indian ,types and of the religious teaching of the young Sayyid.