CHOICE TALES. 



Toinette : A Tale of Southern Life. By Henry Chur- 

 ton. Not only a brilliant picture of individual life, full of stir- 

 ring scenes and emotional characters, but a graphic delineation 

 of slave-life and emancipation, by one who lived under the old 

 re"gime at the South, and saw it give place to the new. I vol., 



i2mo • • $i.5° 



u A carefully-written work, which will repay perusal, and interest to the end." 

 — Arcadian. 



"Interesting, and, once begun, not easy to leave." — Boston Globe. 



Norwood : Or, Village Life in New England. 



A Novel. By Henry Ward Beecher. Uniform Edition of the 

 Author's Works ; also bound uniform with J. B. Ford & Co.'s 

 Novel Series. I vol., i2mo. Illustrated by Alfred Fredericks. 

 Cloth $2.00 



Mr. Beecher's only novel, and a remarkable illustration of his versatility, being 

 full of exquisite descriptions of scenery and delineations of social and domestic life, 

 exceedingly graphic in detail, and abounding in passages of genial humor and 

 kindly wisdom. 



The Circuit Rider. A Tale. By Edward Eggleston, 



author of " The Hoosier Schoolmaster P etc. I vol. i2mo. Illus- 

 trated. Cloth $1.75 



" The breezy freshness t of the Western prairie blended with the refinements of 

 literary culture. It is alive with the sound of rushing streams and the echoes of 

 the forest, but shows a certain graceful self-possession which betrays the presence 

 of the artist's power." — N. Y. Tribune. 



" The best American story, and the most thoroughly American one, that has 

 appeared for years." — Phila* Evening Bulletin. 



Brave Hearts. A Novel. By Robertson Gray (R. W. 

 Raymond). I vol. i2mo. Illustrated by Darley, Stephens, 

 Frank Beard, and Kendrick. Cloth $1 75 



'About as pure, breezy, and withal, readable a story of American life as we' 

 e met with this long time." — Congregationalist. 

 /'Its pictures of the strange life of those early California days are simply 



have met with this long time." — Congregationalist. 



/'Its pictures of the strange life of those ear!, 

 admirable, quite as good as anything Bret Harte has written." — Lit. World. 



A Good Match. A Novel. By Amelia Perrier. 1 vol. 



i2mo. Cloth ... 1 50 



'■ A very readable love story, tenderly told." — Hearth and Home. 

 *" The characters appear and act with a real life." — Providence Press. 



My Wife and I ; or, Harry Henderson's History. A 

 Novel. By Harriet Beecher Stowe. Illustrated. 1 vol. i2mo. 

 Cloth §i 75 



" Always bright, piquant, and^ entertaining, with an occasional touch of tender- 

 ness, strong because subtle, keen in sarcasm, full of womanly logic directed against 

 unwomanly tendencies." — Boston yonrnal. 



We and Our Neighbors. A Novel. By Harriet 

 Beecher Stowe. Illustrated. I vol. l2mo. A Sequel to "My 

 Wife and I." In preparation. 

 As fresh witty, and charming in style as all of Mrs. Stowe*s works are. 

 * + * To be had through any Bookseller, or will be mailed, post-paid^ 

 on receipt of price, by the Publishers, 



J. B. FORD Sl CO., 



27 Park Place. New York. 



