SPORTING BOOKS 



BY THEODORE ROOSEVELT 

 Hunting Trips of a Ranchman 



Sketches of Sport on the Northern Cattle Plains. With 

 numerous engravings from designs by Frost, Gifford, Beard, 



and Sandham. 8, pp. xvi. -f- 347 $2.50 



Also, SAGAMORE SERIES, in two volumes, with frontis- 

 piece. Cloth, 16, each 50 cents 



Divided as follows : 



I. Hunting Trips of a Ranchman 

 II. Hunting Trips on the Prairie and in the 

 Mountains 



" One of those distinctively American books which ought to be wel- 

 comed as contributing to raise the literary prestige of the country all 

 over the world." N. Y. Tribune. 



" One of the rare books which sportsmen will be glad to add to their 

 libraries. . . Mr. Roosevelt may rank with Scrope, Lloyd, Harris, 

 St. John, and half a dozen others, whose books will always be among 

 the sporting classics." London Saturday Review. 



". . . He must be a hopeless reader who does not rise from this 

 book with a new and vivid sense of ' the fascination of the vastness, 

 loneliness, and monotony of the prairieSj' and of 'the sad and ever- 

 lasting unrest of the wilderness,' of the Big Horn Mountains. . . . 

 As already said, the charm about this ranchman as author is that he 

 is every inch a gentleman-sportsman. . . ." London Spectator. 



The Wilderness Hunter 



With an Account of the Big Game of the United States, and 

 its Chase with Horse, Hound, and Rifle. With illustrations 

 by Remington, Frost, Sandham, Eaton, Beard, and others. 

 8, pp. xvi. +472 $2.50 



Also, SAGAMORE SERIES, two volumes, with frontispieces. 



Cloth, 16, each 50 cents 



Divided as follows : 



I. The Wilderness Hunter II. Hunting the Grisly 



< " A book which breathes the spirit of the wilderness and presents a 

 vivid picture of a phase of American life which is rapidly passing 

 away, with clear incisive force." New York Literary News. 



" For one who intends to go a-hunting in the West this book is in- 

 valuable. One may rely upon its information. But it has better 

 qualities. It is good reading for anybody, and people who never hunt 

 and never will are sure to derive pleasure from its account of that part 

 of the United States, relatively small, which is still a wilderness." 

 New York Times. 



G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS 



NEW YORK LONDON 



