AUTUMN ANNOUNCEMENTS, 



29 



BOOKS PUBLISHED IN 

 THE SPRING, 1905. 



FICTION. 



Flute of Pan. By JOHN OLIVER HOBBES. and impres 

 sion. Crown 8vo. [RED CLOTH LIBRARY.] 



The story of Mrs. Craigie's new novel is above all things a love story. The scenes are 

 laid in Venice, in P'lorence, and in the Princess Margaret's own kingdom of Siguria, which 

 may be taken as one of those kingdoms in Europe that keep more of the old romantic 

 Court life, with its intrigues, its dramatic surprises, its dangers and its pleasures, than is 

 possible in any of the capitals of the greater European nations. 



By Beach and Bogland. By JANE BARLOW, Author of 

 " Irish Idylls," etc. With Frontispiece. Crown 8vo. 



[GREEN CLOTH LIBRARY. 



The scene of these stories of Irish peasant-life is laid in the west of Ireland, mostly on 

 the shores of the Atlantic, where sea-fishing and the farming of the bogland yield a living 

 of the poorest and plainest. 



LuCie and I. By HENRIETTE CORKRAN, Author of " Celebrities 

 and I," " Oddities, Others, and I," etc. Crown 8vo, cloth. 



The scenes in this story are laid chiefly in France, Italy and Switzerland, and the book 

 contains many vivid descriptions of Continental ways and manners. It is cast in the 

 form of an autobiography, the narrator being Gabrielle Amory, the only daughter of an 

 English savant settled in Paris. The characterisation is exceptionally vivid; there is 

 much brilliant dialogue, and many pages in the book read like actual reminiscences. 



Stolen ^^aterS. By LUCAS CLEEVE, Author of " Blue Lilies." 



" The Fool-Killer," etc. and Impression. Crown 8vo. 



[RED CLOTH LIBRARY. 



A story of clerical life, relating how, by a strange tangle of circumstances, an outcast 

 becomes the spiritual guide of a priest. 



Grand Relations. By J. S. FLETCHER, Author of "When 

 Charles the First was King," "The Arcadians," etc. Crown 8vo. 

 [RED CLOTH LIBRARY.] 



Mr. J. S. Fletcher's new novel " Grand Relations" is of the same gente as the same 

 author's well-known story " The Paths of the Prudent" a comedy of rustic life. The 

 scenes are laid in a Yorkshire village, and the characters are all studies of real personalities. 



A Song of a Single Note. By AMELIA E. BARR. Crown 8vo. 

 [RED CLOTH LIBRARY.] 



Like most of Mrs. Barr's books, this is a love story with a historical setting. The period 

 is the American War of Independence, and the tale begins " in the fourth year of the 

 captivity of New York," when the town was held by the troops of King George under 

 General Clinton. Some notable character sketches of historical figures, as, for instance, 

 General Clinton, will be found in the book. 



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