4 Mr. Edward Arnold's Autumn Announcements. 



UNEXPLORED SPAIN. 



By ABEL CHAPMAN, 



Author of ' Wild Nokway,' etc.. 



And WALTER J. BUCK, 



Bl.llTSH VlCE-CoNSUI, AT JeKEZ. 



With 200 Illustrations by the AUTHOR, E. CALDWELL, and others, 

 and Photographs. 



Super Royal 8vo. 21s. net. 



In Europe Spain is certainly far and away the wildest of wild 

 lands- — due as much to her physical formation as to any historic or 

 racial causes. Whatever the precise reason, the fact remains that 

 wellnigh one-half of Spain to-day lies wholly waste and barren — 

 abandoned to wild beasts and wild birds. Naturally the Spanish 

 fauna remains one of the richest and most varied in Europe. 



It is of these wild regions and of their wild inhabitants that the 

 authors write, backed by lifelong experience. Spain, in this sense, 

 is virgin ground, unoccupied save by our authors themselves. Their 

 ' Wild Spain,' written in 1892, was widely appreciated, and for 

 many years past has commanded a fancy price. 



The present work represents nearly forty years of constant study, of 

 practical experience in field and forest, combined with systematic 

 note-taking and analysis by men who are recognised as specialists in 

 their selected pursuits. These comprise every branch of sport with 

 rod, gun, and rifle; and, beyond all that, the ability to elaborate the 

 results in the light of modern zoological science. 



The illustrations have been prepared from life-sketches made upon 

 the spot, and include many studies of the rarer or vanishing forms 

 of animal life, as well as some photographs by H.R.H. Philippe, 

 Duke of Orleans. 



FOREST LIFE AND SPORT IN INDIA. 



By SAINTHILL EARDLEY-WILMOT, CLE., 



La TEI.Y iNSrECTOR-GF.KERAI. OF FOKESTS TO THE INDIAN GoVERN.MENT ; COMMISSIONER 

 UNDER THE DEVELOPMENT AND RoAD IMPROVEMENT FuNDS ACT. 



With Illustrations from Photographs by MABEL EARDLEY-WILMOT. 

 Demy 8vo. 12s. 6d. net. 



The Author of this volume was appointed to the Indian Forest 

 Service in days when the Indian Mutiny was fresh in the minds of 

 his companions, and life in the department full of hardships, loneli- 

 ness, and discomfort. These drawbacks, however, were largely 

 compensated for by the splendid opportunities for sport of all kinds 

 which almost every station in the Service offered, and it is in 

 describing the pursuit of game that the most exciting episodes of the 

 book are to be found. What Mr. Eardley-Wilmot does not know 

 about tiger-shooting cannot be worth knowing, for in addition to 

 having bagged several score, he has many a time watched them 



