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A "SlSrW ]VOVEL, 
By SOLON ROBINSON, 
THE VETERAX AGSICULTURAL EDITOR 
OP 
THE NEW YORK TRIBUNE. 
A novel by Solon Robinson, long and well-known as the 
Agricultural Editor of The Tkibunk, will be commenced 
in TiiK "Weekly Tribuxe of December 5th. It is called 
IVEWOIVXOO ; 
A STOItr OF WESTERN LIFE. INDIAN. AND DOMFJiTi/- 
Though Mr. Robinson's first novel, we do not doubt that 
it will newly prove the wortli of the pen that in so many 
chapters of successful writing for the farm and tlie flrcside, 
and in behalf of the friendless poo^' of a crowded city 
(witness the "Hot Corn Sketches"), has been entertain- 
ing and instructive. •■ 
A true Indian novel is among the varieties of latter-day 
fiction, and the pioneer life of the "West, abounding, as it 
does, in rude but rich material for the work of the novelist, 
has found, of late, but lew faithful delineator'?. It Is not 
too much to say that few Americans have been so near to 
the American people in their homestead life and charac- 
ters as settlers and pioneers, as the author of Newontoc ; 
few have traveled so far and observed so closely amid the 
varieties of the farmei''s and pioneer's life. East and 
West ; aud no writer for the daily press has harl a keener 
relish for, and livelier sympathy wilh, the fresh and 
fi'ee out-door life wliich enters into the element of hi' 
novel. Mr. Robinson's writings have always been marked 
by a quaint and direct force; pictures, simple, but graphic, 
of things as they renlly are; practical and minute knowledge 
of the useful aud the beautiful as they are brought togetlior 
into every-day consciousness— these are some of the fea- 
tures of a style of word painting with which the readers of 
The Tribune have been long familiar. 
The new novel, wliich will be begun the flr'^t week in 
December, will continue during the Spring. 
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