Post 8vo. picture cover, is. ; cloth, is. 6d. 



HARRY FLUDYER AT CAMBRIDGE. 



BY R. C. LEHMANN. 



1 "Harry Fludyer at Cambridge" is really very funny.' JAMES PAYN, in 

 The Illustrated London Ne^vs. 



1 One of the cleverest bits of " real life " we have read for a long time. . . . 

 The author, whoever he may be, has a vein of humour.' VANITY FAIR. 



' " Harry Fludyer " surprises in a way which does his author credit. He 

 and the members of his family are all so amazingly life-like that first one is 

 tempted to accept the Fludyer letters as a genuine selection from bond-fide 

 family documents, and afterwards one clearly perceives that they are much too 

 natural to be genuine. . . . The Fludyer letters are extremely entertaining, if 

 very light, reading.' SATURDAY REVIEW. 



'Clever, satirical, epigrammatic. ... A pretty fancy and a facile pen.' 

 EUROPEAN MAIL. 



'Twenty minutes of mirth may easily be passed in its perusal.' SCOTTISH 

 LEADER. 



' The author of this little book is a humorist of no mean order. . . . Some of 

 the passages are intensely funny. . . . Will be greatly enjoyed by those who 

 appreciate pure and spontaneous wit.' BRISTOL OBSERVER. 



' Full of fun and frolic of the sort that bears being read aloud.' CHRISTIAN 

 WORLD. 



c The " Family Letters " are most amusing, and really delightful reading.' 

 NEWCASTLE CHRONICLE. 



' The book contains a good deal of quiet, innocent fun.' GLASGOW HERALD. 



' A little volume that I really owe a grudge to, because it detained me 

 rresistibly from urgent work.' TRUTH. 



' University life is treated with considerable freshness in ' ' Harry Fludyer." 

 MANCHESTER GUARDIAN. 



' Harry's letters are very cleverly written, and contain some delightful strokes 

 of undergraduate humour. . . . The writer has produced a very clever and 

 amusing book.' CAMBRIDGE INDEPENDENT PRESS. 



' The letters will come almost as a revelation. Has a new humorist arisen ? 

 It certainly seems as though it were so. We have a whole gallery of humorous 

 portraiture. The work has remarkable merits, and is one that should be read 

 by all who can appreciate delicate irony and keen satirical portraiture.' DAILY 

 NEWS. 



' We have here average men and average life depicted with truth, good- 

 tempered satire, and the most winning and delightful humour. . . . We can 

 cordially recommend this book. . . . The characters are depicted with a clearness 

 and finish which betoken the practised writer. The prevailing tone of the book 

 is most pleasant and genial. Much of it is funny, and all of it is accurate.' 

 SPEAKER. 



' A capital story, told in a very original way. . . . The way in which the 

 characters paint their own portraits in a series of perfectly natural epistles, 

 extending over two college terms, invests each with an individuality as charming 

 as it is pronounced.' MANCHESTER EXAMINER. 



London: CHATTO WINDUS, 214 Piccadilly, W. 



