24 BOOKS PUBLISHED 



THE PICCADILLY NOVELS continued, 



Poor Miss Finch. By WitKiE COLLINS. 



Illustrated by G. Du MAUKIER and EDWARD HUGHES. 



Miss or Mrs. ? By WILKIE COLLINS. 



Illustrated by S. L. FJLDES and HENRY WOODS.- 



The New Magdalen. By WILKPE COLLINS. 



Illustrated by G. Du MAURIER and C. S. RANDS. 



The Frozen Deep. By WILKIE COLLINS. 



Illustrated by G. Du MAURIER and J. MAHONEY. 



The Law and the Lady. By WILKIE COLLINS, 



Illustrated by S. L. FILDES and S. HALL. 



' ' Like all the author s works, full of a certain power and ingenuity. . . . It 

 is upon such suggestions of crime that the fascination of the story depends. . . . 

 The reader feels it his duty to serve to the end upon the inqiiest on which he has- 

 been called by the author" TIMES. 



Felicia. By M. BETHAM EDWARDS. 



"A noble novel. Its teaching is elevated, its story is sympathetic, and the kind 

 of feeling its perusal leaves behind is that more ordinarily derived from music or 

 poetry than from prose fiction. Few works in modern fiction stand as high in our 

 estimation as this." SUNDAY TIMES. 



Patricia Kemball. By E. LYNN LINTON. 



With Frontispiece by G. Du MAURIER. 



"A very clever and well-constructed story, original and striking, interesting 

 all through. A novel abounding in thought and power and interest." TIMES. 



' ' Displays genuine humour, as well as keen social observation. Enough graphic 

 portraiture and witty observation to furnish materials for half-a-dozen novels of 

 the ordinary kind." SATURDAY REVIEW. 



The Atonement of Learn Dundas. By E. LYNN LINTON. 



" In her narrowness and Jier depth, in her boundless loyalty, her self-forgetting 

 passion, that cxclusiveness of love which is akin to cruelty, and the fierce 

 humility which is vicarious pride, Leain Dundas is a striking figure. In one 

 quality the authoress has in some measure surpassed herself" PALL MALL 

 GAZETTE. 



The Evil Eye r and other Stories. By KATHARINE S.MACQUOID. 

 Illustrated by THOMAS R. MACQUOID and PERCY MACQUOID. 



"For Norman country life what the ' Johnny Ludlow ' stories are for English 

 rural delineation, that is, cameos delicately, if not very minutely or vividly 

 wrought, and quite finished enough to give a pleasurable sense of artistic ease and 

 /acuity. A word of commendation is merited by the ilhtstrations."AcA.r>E.JA\. 



Number Seventeen. By HENRY KINGSLEY. 



Oakshott Castle. By HENRY KINGS-LEY. 



"A brisk and clear north wind of sentiment sentiment that braces instead of 

 enervating blows through all his works, a)id makes all their readers at onct 

 htaltJiur and more glad.' SPECTATOR. 



