IV. 



Scientific and Medical. 



THE LIFE OF ELIE METCHNIKOFF. By Olga Metch- 

 NiKOFF. Translated by Mrs. R. L. Devonshire. 



Frontispiece. Demy 8vo. 



Reviewing the French edition of this book in January 1921, 

 The Times Literary Supplement said : " Madame MetchnikofF's 

 excellent analysis of her husband's scientific theories does not 

 hinder her from showing us the living, the lovable, the extra- 

 ordinary human being who conceived so many ideas, who 

 developed so many theories, inventions, innovations. . . . Mme. 

 MetchnikofF has made us admire the man of science and warmly 

 the man." 



THE LIFE OF PASTEUR. By R£n^ Vallery-Radot. 

 Translation by Mrs. R. L. Devonshire. New Edition 

 with a Preface by Sir William Osler, Bart., M.D,, F.R.S. 

 2nd Edition. Demy 8vo. Portrait. los. 6d. net. 



" A classic of scientific biography." — Saturday Revieiv. 



" The translation of M. Vallery-Radot's admirable biography 

 of the great Frenchman is a book which every English-speaking 

 admirer of Pasteur will desire to possess." — The Athenaum. 



" Pasteur's career is set out in the fullest detail, making an 

 absorbing narrative, and the scientific, social, and political environ- 

 ment is sketched with vivid accuracy. It is the picture of a great 

 man, a great career, and a great epoch in the history of France 

 and of science." — The Times Literary Supplement. 



SIR VICTOR HORSLEY. By Stephen Paget. Foreword 

 by Lady Horsley. Illustrated. Demy 8vo. 21s. net. 



" All the aspects of Horsley 's strenuous life are depicted with 

 the writer's accustomed sympathy and skill. Mr. Paget has given 

 us a study of absorbing interest. . . . We are never allowed to 

 lose sight of the restless energy and indomitable courage that 

 characterised all that Horsley undertook." — British Medical 

 Journal. 



" No biographer who agreed with Horsley could have given us 

 anything so valuable, so convincing, so vitally defined. . . . Mr. 

 Paget has never had an equal as a medical biographer, and here 

 he has excelled himself." — The Observer. 



15 



