D. APPLETON & CO.'S PUBLICATIONS. 



A New Book by the author of "A Social Departure." 



yJN AMERICAN GIRL IN LONDON, By Sara 

 -^^ Jeannette Duncan. With 80 Illustrations by F. H. Town- 

 send. i2mo. Cloth, $1.50. 



A brilliant book, picturing English sights, society, customs, and amuse- 

 ments, as seen by an unconventional and witty observer. The same quali- 

 ties which made "A Social Departure" so remarkable a success will make 

 *' An American Girl in London " a book which is " talked about everywhere," 



"In the lighter literature of last year there was nothing more amusing than *A 

 Social Departure,' by Sara Jeannette Duncan, of Canada. It was just long enough- 

 it could not well have been longer — but each reader wished that the author might write 

 another book in similar style. Well, she has done it, and she could not have taken a 

 better subject than ' An American Girl in London.' " — Ncuj York Herald. 



"The raciness and breeziness which made * A Social Departure,' by the same au- 

 thor, last season, the best-read and most talked-of book of travel for many a year, 

 permeates the new book, and appears between the lines of every page. It is super- 

 fluous to say that 'An American Girl' is 'awfully fetching.' "—Brooklyn Siandard- 

 Union, 



A 



SOCIAL DEPARTURE: How Orthodocia and I 

 Went Round t/ie World by Ourselves. By Sara Jeannette 

 Duncan. lUustratedby F. H. Townsend. i2mo. Cloth, $1.75. 



" It is fl cheery, witty, decorous, chartning book.*' — New York Herald. 



" Widely read and praised on both sides of the Atlantic and "Pacific, the diary is 

 now republished in New York, with scores of illustrations which fit the text exactly 

 and show the mind of artist and writer in unison." — New York Evening Post. 



" . . . It is to be doubted whether another book can be found so thoroughly amus- 

 ing from beginning to end." — Boston Daily Advertiser. ■* 



"A very bright book on a very entertaining subject. We commend it to those 

 readers who abhor the ordinary statistical book of travels."— .S<?j^« Evening T/an- 

 script. 



"A brighter, merrier, more entirely charming 'sook would be, indeed, difficult to 

 find." — St. Louis Republican. 



" For sparkling wit, irresistibly contaeious fun, keen observation, absolutely poetic 

 appreciation of natural beauty, and vivid descriptiveness, it has no recent rival. "^ 

 Mrs. P. T. Barnum's Letter to the New York Tribune. 



New York: D. APPLETON & CO., i, 3. & 5 Bond Street. 



