WORKS ON SPORT 



SPORT ON THE NILGIRIS 

 AND DSf WYNAAD 



By F. W. F. FLETCHER 

 Illustrated. 8vo. I2s. net. 



FIELD. — " A work which for some time to come will take rank as the standard 

 book of reference on the wild animals of the famous Nilgiri Hills." 



INDIAN FIELD. — " Teeming with interesting and exciting adventures. . . . 

 Mr. Fletcher is to be heartily congratulated on the result of his labours ; and the 

 book must occupy a prominent and easily accessible position on the shelves of every 

 Indian sportsman's library." 



PALL MALL GAZETTE. — "Mr. Fletcher's work is perhaps the best yet 

 published on the subject with which it deals. Never yet has the grandeur of the 

 Nilgiris scenery been so well described and appreciated, nor the joys of camp life 

 and sport in that superb climate been so thoroughly appreciated. . . . Rarely has a 

 more interesting book on sport been written than this." 



ACADEMY. — " Only once in a way do we get books that may be regarded as 

 the classics of Indian sport, such as Baldwin's Large and Small Game of Be7igal, 

 Forsyth's Highlatids of Central India, and Sanderson's Thirteen Years among the 

 Wild Beasts of India. In every way worthy to be classed with those we have named 

 is Mr. Fletcher's work." 



A COLONY IN THE MAKING 



OR , 



SPORT AND PROFIT IN BRITISH EAST AFRICA 

 By LORD CRANWORTH 

 Illustrated. 8vo. 12s. net. 



DAILY TELEGRAPH. — "It is a valuable and interesting work, at once 

 descriptive and practical, that Lord Cranworth has written ; valuable especially to 

 those looking out for a field in which to utilise their energies and their capital, to 

 those who would understand local conditions of different parts of the Empire, and 

 to those who would have first-hand information about a famous big-game country, 

 and deeply interesting to all readers who can enjoy well-informed and well-presented 

 accounts of life in distant places." 



GLOBE. — ' ' The book is one which will attract considerable attention. If it will 

 not supersede .Sir Charles Elliot's classic work on East Africa, it is worthy at least a 

 place beside it on the shelf of the colonist, sportsman, and colonial student, to all of 

 whom different chapters will make an appeal. 



DAILY EXPPESS.—" Lord Cranworth has the gift of making his text 

 extremely attractive, even to those who are not directly interested in the subject itself. 

 His writing is pithy, his descriptions are graphic, his arguments are lucid, and 

 underlying the whole story is evident a keen sense of humour. Those who inhabit 

 the territory he describes will read the book with delight ; those who propose to go 

 there will do well to study it beforehand." 



LONDON : MACMILLAN AND CO., Ltd. 



