2j- Series continued. 

 COUNTRYMEN ALL. 



By KATHERINE TYNAN. Cr. 8vo. Cloth, 2/- net. 



11 Katherine Tynan is seen at her best in some of these 

 short sketches, where her delightful humour and pathos 

 and her imagination so compact of beauty a,nd tender- 

 ness find often such delicate expression. . . . Humour, 

 pathos, poetry all are in these short stories, and they 

 make a volume of rare beauty " Pall Mall Gazette. 



" May be welcomed ffor its optimism, its persistent 

 good humour, and its embracing charity." Daily News. 



" ' Countrymen All ' is a collection of gems written by 

 a master hand. Katherine Tynan has never done more 

 delicate work. The short stories of Irish people . . . 

 hold us enthralled because they ring absolutely true, and 

 deal with real men and women." Evening Standard 

 and St. James's Gazette. 



" The whole book is delightfully fresh and, may we 

 add ? delightfully Irish." Morning Post. 



" Full of the wistful charm that we are accustomed to in 

 this author's work." The Outlook. 



SOURIS. 



By FAY MYDDLETON. Cr. 8vo. Cloth, 2/- net. 



A new novel by a new author. This book tells, in a very 

 attractive and. human manner, the love stories of two 

 women of widely different temperaments who were none 

 the less the closest of friends. The author believes in, and 

 portray* with a faithful hand, the realities of a friendship 

 which can exist between women. Her two studies in 

 feminity, the one tempestuous and beautiful, the other 

 charming and serene, are cleverly and sincerely presented, 

 and their respective qualities balance and complete the one, 

 the other, in the most remarkable manner. How life 

 brought peace and happiness to the one, through a sea of 

 sorrow, and how a tragic fate pursued the other, although 

 the brightest prospects heralded in the opening of her 

 career, are the subjects of this book, wherein love and 

 passion play their accustomed part. 



10 



