ROUND KANGCHENJUNGA. 



By DOUGLAS W. FRESHFIELD, F.R.G.S. 



Lately President of the Alpine Club. 



Royal Svo. With Maps and numerous Illustrations, lis. nett. 



The magnificent range of Kangchenjunga is perhaps, in one sense, 

 the best-known portion of the Himalaya Mountains, inasmuch as it 

 is visible from the popular hill-station of Darjeeling; but till quite 

 recently it was almost unexplored and very inadequately mapped. The 

 complete circuit of the great mountain had never been made, and its 

 possibility was uncertain, till it was demonstrated by Mr. Freshfield's 

 remarkable journey. 



The map which was the first-fruit of that journey is in itself an 

 invaluable addition to our geographical knowledge, but the volume 

 which describes it has a far wider range of interest. Its results have 

 been dealt with by Professor Garwood, but the book will appeal first 

 and foremost to mountaineers and lovers of adventurous travel. The 

 country traversed has also its own crop of frontier questions and poli- 

 tical and racial problems, and these, too, are dealt with by Mr. Freshfield 

 with his usual clearness, while his descriptive powers have found 

 abundant scope in what is, perhaps, the most superb scenery in the 

 world. In connection with the photographs which adorn his narrative, 

 it is enough to mention the name of Signor Vittorio Sella. 



MEMORIES OF THE MONTHS. 



Third Series. 



By the Right Hon. Sir HERBERT MAXWELL, Bart., M.P. 



Large crown 8vo. With Photogravure Illustrations, ys. 6d. 



It is now three years since the Second Series of ' Memories of the 

 Months ' appeared, and it is hoped that the public will welcome this 

 fresh instalment, which, while dealing with Sport and Natural History 

 on the same general lines as its predecessors, is, of course, entirely 

 different from anything that has hitherto been published in the 

 ' Memories.' Sir Herbert is, indeed, continually adding to his stock 

 of Memories by fresh experiences, so that his books afford a valuable 

 index to the condition of angling and deer-stalking at the time of 

 writing ; while it is rare to find a sportsman who has so keen an interest 

 in all matters of Natural History, Forestry, etc. 



This volume is uniform in style and binding with the First and 

 Second Series. 



