MACMILLAN & GO/8 PUBLICATIONS. 



BOOKS BY DR. A. R. WALLACE, F.R.S. 



THE MALAY ARCHIPELAGO: THE LAND 



OF THE ORANG-UTAN AND THE BIRD OF PARADISE. 



A Narrative of Travel. With Studies of Man and Nature. 



By ALFRED RUSSEL WALLACE, LL.D., F.L.S., Author 



of " Darwinism," &c. With Maps and Illustrations. Fourth 



Edition. Extra crown 8vo, 6s. 



GLASGOW HERALD. "There is probably no more interesting book of 

 travel in the language. . . . For one-and-twenty years it has held its place as a 

 monograph in a region of the East which is full of fascination, not only for the 

 naturalist and ethnographer, but for the ordinary reader of travels." 



ISLAND LIFE: OR, THE PHENOMENA AND 



CAUSES OF INSULAR FAUNAS AND FLORAS. In- 

 cluding a revision and attempted solution of the problem of 

 Geological Climates. By the same Author. With Illustrations 

 and Maps. Second Edition. Crown 8vo, 6s. 



THE GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF 



ANIMALS; with a study of the relations of living and extinct 

 faunas as elucidating the past changes of the earth's surface. 

 With Maps and Illustrations. In two Vols. Medium 8vo, 42^. 



NATURAL SELECTION AND TROPICAL 



NATURE : Essays on Descriptive and Theoretical Biology. 

 New Edition with corrections and additions. Extra crown 8vo, 

 6s. 



DARWINISM : An Exposition of the Theory of 



Natural Selection, with some of its Applications. By the same 

 Author. Illustrated. Extra crown 8vo, gs. 



SATURDAY REVIEW. "Mr. Wallace's volume may be taken as a 

 faithful exposition of what Darwin meant. It is written with perfect clearness, 

 with a simple beauty and attractiveness of style not common to scientific works, 

 with a dignity and freedom from anything like personal bitterness worthy of 

 Darwin himself, and with an orderliness and completeness that must render miscon- 

 ception impossible." 



ATHENMUM. "Mr. Wallace adds so much that is new, and he writes in so 

 charming and simple a style, that his readers more than he are to be congratulated 

 on the latest service he has rendered to the science he has served so well." 



Prof . Ray Lankester in NATURE. "No one has so strong a claim as Mr. 

 Wallace to be heard as the exponent of the theory of the origin of species, of which 

 he is with Darwin the joint author. . . . The book is one which has interest 

 not only for the general reader, to whom it is primarily addressed, but also for the 

 more special students of natural history. The latter will find in its pages an abund- 

 ance of new facts and arguments which, whether they prove convincing or not, are 

 of extreme value and full of interest." 



MACMILLAN AND CO., LONDON. 



