The Other Fellow. By Robert Leighton. (a. Melrose. 6s.)—...
is a tale of the "claimant" kind, a less common variety now than it was in the time of the Tichborne case and for some years afterwards. The subject is not an easy one to......
With The Dyaks Of Borneo. By Captain F. S. Brereton.
(Blackie and Son. 62.)—Captain Brereton tells his story, which is full of incident and excitement, with much spirit, but his personages seem to speak a little formally. Heroes......
Continued The Work Down To The Beginning Of The...
War. Among the valuable additions we may notice the work of the Hague Conference of 1899, and the Anglo-French Agreement of this year, the full text of which is published in an......
We Are To Have A Series Of "animal Autobiographies" (a.
and C. Black, 68.), of which the first volume is now before us, The Autobiography of a Eat, by G. M. A. Hewett. It is an amusing book. The rat is not ashamed of himself. He even......
Literary Geography. By William Sharp. (pall Mall...
net.)—A single volume of literary geography must naturally appear to be somewhat arbitrarily composed, as Mr. Sharp hints ; and as these chapters are republished from a......
Vast Size Of London, On The Contrary, Makes It Impossible
to deal with in any volume of reasonable dimensions, just as it forbids the growth of a local patriotism. Mr. Smeaton devotes his first eleven chapters to the history of the......
Curly. By Roger Pocock. (gay And Bird. 6s.)—this "tale Of
the Arizona Desert"—Arizona is described in vigorous language which makes one content never to have seen it—is a piece of very spirited work, quite worthy of the author of "The......
C Urrent Literature.
......
Through Flood And Flame. By Henry Charles Moore. (r.t.s....
Moore's subject is the "Adventures and Perils of Pro- testant Heroes." He finds his themes in many of the countries of Europe. He takes us to France, where he tells stories of......