BOOKS ON SOUTH AMERICA 



Vagabonding down the Andes. By HARRY 



A. FRANCK, author of "A Vagabond Journey Round the 

 World," etc. With a Map and 176 Illustrations. 

 Cloth, 25/- net. Second Impression. 



" The book is a brilliant record of adventurous travel among 

 strange scenes and with even more strange companions, and 

 vividly illustrates, by its graphic text and its admirable photo- 

 graphs, the real conditions of life in the backwood regions of South 

 America." Manchester Guardian. 



"Mr. Franck is to be congratulated on having produced a readable 

 and even fascinating book. His journey lay over countries in which 

 an increasing interest is being felt. Practically speaking, he may 

 be said to have started from Panama, wandered through Colombia, 

 spending some time at Bogota, and then going on to Ecuador, of 

 which Quito is the centre. Next he traversed the fascinating country 

 of the Incas, from the borders of which he entered Bolivia, going 

 right across that country till he approached Brazil. He passed 

 through Paraguay, cut through a corner of the Argentine to Uruguay, 

 and so to the River Plata and the now well-known town of Buenos 

 Ayres." Country Life. 



In the Wilds of South America : Six Years of Explora- 

 tion in Colombia, Venezuela, British Guiana, Peru, Bolivia, 

 Argentina, Paraguay and Brazil. By LEO E. MILLER, 

 of the American Museum of Natural History. With 48 

 Full-page Illustrations and with Maps. Cloth, 21 /- net. 



This volume represents a series of almost continuous 

 explorations hardly ever paralleled in the huge areas 

 traversed. The author is a distinguished field naturalist 

 one of those who accompanied Colonel Roosevelt on 

 his famous South American expedition and his first object 

 in his wanderings over 150,000 miles of territory was the 

 observation of wild life ; but hardly second was that of 

 exploration. The result is a wonderfully informative, 

 impressive and often thrilling narrative in which savage 

 peoples and all but unknown animals largely figure, which 

 forms an infinitely readable book and one of rare value 

 for geographers, naturalists and other scientific men. 



T. FISHER UNWIN LTD., 1 ADELPHI TERRACE. LONDON, W.C.2 



