The Glasgow Herald. "We have to announce a rarely ex- 

 hilarating book. One of the most vivid and high-spirited accounts 

 of a shooting expedition on record. Miss Herbert gives us 

 entrancing accounts of jungle life." 



The Literary World. " So bright and graphic is every page of 

 Miss Herbert's book, that even the non-sportsman will thrill with 

 the joy of the chase as he reads." 



The Morning Post. "One of the freshest and most attractive 

 books on sport of the year." 



M. A. P. " This is quite a remarkable book. It is something 

 more than a book of travel and sport. It is light and epigrammatic, 

 and happily humorous. The reader will have a lively time with 

 this volume. It is certainly entrancing." 



Pall Mall Gazette. "The book proved of such interest to the 

 present reviewer that he found himself in the small hours closing 

 the volume with regret. Miss Herbert's book is well worth 

 reading." 



The Ladies' Field. " This book has the rare charm which an 

 individual style gives to vivid personal experiences. Even in these 

 days there are but few women who know their Shakespeare and 

 Dante so thoroughly. We hope that every one who can will read 

 a book which is the best story of a big game shooting expedition 

 we have read this year." 



The Liverpool Courier. " The book is a most entertaining and 

 readable narrative. The author has a happy knack of picturesque 

 description, while the raciness of her style and her keen and witty 

 observation make the reading of the book a genuine pleasure." 



The Globe. " Any reader who can enjoy a bright, exciting record 

 will thank Miss Herbert for her account of a gallant feat." 



The Western Morning News. " Highly interesting reading." 



World's Work. " If all records of shooting expeditions were 

 as breezy and unconventional they would be sought out by the 

 reviewer as eagerly as they are now shunned by him." 



The Spectator. " Chivalry and fair criticism alike force us to 

 give the place of honour among recent sporting books to the ' Two 

 Dianas.' We are captivated in spite of ourselves. By the time 

 the most prejudiced reader gets to the end he will admit that he 

 has been well entertained." 



Forest and Stream, U.S.A. " One lays the book aside with the 

 regret that its pages number but three hundred. The book is one 

 of the most interesting of the year." 



