By 



A NOVEL OF NEIV YORK jIFE. 



Averages. 



Eleanor Stuart. 121110. Cloth, Si. 50. 



"The strength of the book is its entertaining pictures of human nature and its 

 shrewd, incisive observations upon the social problems, great and small, which present 

 themselves in the complex life of society in the metropolis. Those who are fond of 

 dry wit, a subtle humor, and what Emerson calls 'a philosophy of insight and not of 

 tradition,' will find ' Averages ' a novel to their taste. . . . There are interesting love 

 episodes and clever, original situations. An author capable of such work is to be 

 reckoned with. She has in her the root of the matter." — New York Mail and Express. 



" The author of ' Averages ' has no need of striving after cleverness. It comes 

 naturally to her." — Chicago Times-Herald. 



BY TH E AUTHOR OF "DODO." 



Mammon 

 and Co. 



By Edward F. Benson, author of 

 "Dodo." i2mo. Cloth, $1.50. 



" A novel of mark. Its character drawing is vigorous, 

 its dialogue vivacious." — Literature. 



E. F. BENSON. 



"THE LATEST LONDON SUCCESS." 



A Corner of the West. 



By Edith Henrietta Fowler. 121110. Cloth, $1.00; 

 paper, ^o cents. In Appletons' Town and Country Library. 



" There are plenty of clever things in ' A Corner of the West ' said by the char- 

 acters and the author, but they are never too clever by half. Her people talk in an 

 interesting way, but they are not forever trying to score off each other. ... It 

 matters extremely little what happens in a story so well written as this. All Miss 

 Fowler's people are properly individualized. This is a book well out of the com- 

 mon ruck." — London Chronicle. 



These books are for sale by all booksellers ; or they will be sent by mail on receipt of price by the publishers, 



D. APPLETON AND COMPANY, 72 Fifth Avenue, New York. 



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