SIX-SHILLING NOVELS 



EACH IN ONE VOLUME CROWN 8vo. 



HIS LITTLE MOTHER. 



By the Author of " John Halifax, Gentleman." 



"His Little Mother' is one of those pathetic stories which the author tells better 

 than anybody else." John Bull 



" This book is written with all Mrs. Craik's grace of style, the chief charm of which, 

 after all, is its simplicity." Glasgow Herald. 



MY LORD .AJOTD MY L^VDY. 



By Mrs. FORRESTER. 



"A very capital novel. The great charm about it is that Mrs. Forrester is quite at home 

 in the society which she describes. It is a book to read." Standard. 



" Mrs. Forrester's style is so fresh and graphic that the reader is kept under its spell 

 from first to last" Morning Post. 



S O F H Y. 



By VIOLET FANE. 



" ' Sophy ' is the clever and original work of a clever woman. Its merits are of a strik- 

 ingly unusual kind. It is charged throughout with the strongest human interest. It is, 

 in a word, a novel that will make its mark." World. 



^ HOUSE 



By OUIDA. 



" ' A House Party 1 will be read, firstly, because it is Ouida's, and, secondly, because of 

 the brightness of the conversations and descriptions. It is indeed more like a comedy 

 than any other of the writer's books." Globe. 



OMNLA. 



By Mrs. FORRESTER. 



" This book is pleasant and well meant. Here and there are some good touches. Sir 

 Ealph is a man worth reading about." Academy. 



"This tale is well and cleverly written; the characters are drawn and sustained with 

 considerable power, and the conversation is always bright and lively." Glasgow Herald, 



BETRAYAL OF REUBEN HOLT. 



By BARBARA LAKE. 



" This novel shows considerable power of writing. There are some striking scenes and 

 incidents. " Scotsman. 



"This tale displays elevation of thought and feeling, united to no little grace of 

 expression. ' 'Post. 



THE BR^NDRETHS. 



By the Right Hon. A. J. B. BERESFORD HOPE, M.P. 



"The great attraction of this novel is the easy, conversational, knowledgeable tone of 

 it; the sketching from the life, and yet not so close to the life as to be malicious, men, 

 women, periods, and events, to all of which intelligent readers can fit a name. The 

 political and social sketches will naturally excite the chief interest among readers who 

 will be attracted by the author's name and experience." Spectator. 



