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BURIED ALIVE
By Arnold Bennett, Author of 'Clayhanger.' A New Edition. Crown 8vo, 6s.
[August
This is a reprint of one of Mr. Bennett's most delightful stories. It has been out of print for some time.
THE STREET CALLED STRAIGHT
By the Author of 'The Wild Olive.' Crown 8vo, 6s. [August
The anonymous author of those very interesting novels The Inner Shrine and The Wild Olive has in the new book dealt with a financial man's case of conscience. The story, which is laid for the most part in Boston, ill.u.s.trates the New England proverb, 'By the street called straight'--should it not be strait?--'we come to the house called beautiful.'
IT HAPPENED IN SMYRNA
By Thomas Edgelow. Crown 8vo, 6s. [August
A vivid record of Eastern travel and adventure by a new author, who is introduced to the novel-reading public by no less a sponsor than Baroness von Hutten--the auth.o.r.ess of Pam whose cheery preface in the form of an open letter will be found in Mr. Edgelow's first book. The story opens on a German liner off the East African coast, and leads us via Port Said to Smyrna. There and in the interior of Turkey-in-Asia are laid the scenes of Tony Paynter's adventures. It is in the Smyrna bazaars that he and Sylvia Sayers first encounter the Turk who is destined to play so important a role in their two lives, and it is from Smyrna that, at last, they sail away when all has happily ended.
DEVOTED SPARKES
By W. Pett Ridge, Author of 'Thanks to Sanderson.' Crown 8vo, 6s.
[August
Mr. Pett Ridge's new novel, an animated story of London life, concerns a girl sent out to service by her stepmother. Taking the management of her career into her own hands, and holding the reins, goes first to a house on the north side of Regent's Park, afterwards to the neighbourhood of Berkeley Square; and her adventures in both situations, her acquaintances, and the person to whom she is devoted, are described in Mr. Pett Ridge's brightest manner.
THE ANGLO-INDIANS
By Alice Perrin, Author of 'The Charm.' Crown 8vo, 6s. [August
The background of this novel is the contrast between official life in India and a pensioned existence in England. The theme of the story is the affection, almost amounting to a pa.s.sion, that the heroine feels towards India, where she has spent part of her childhood and her early girlhood; it leads to a love adventure involving the chief problem between the East and West.
THE HEATHER MOON
By C. N. and A. M. Williamson, Authors of 'The Lightning Conductor.'
Crown 8vo, 6s. [August
The story of a motor tour in Scotland and many quests. The drama shows us a girl in search of her mother, who has her own reasons for not wishing to be found by a pretty grown-up daughter. A man in search of some lost illusions is also here, and the girl helps him to discover that they are not illusions but splendid truths. Other seekers are a woman in search of love, and her brother in search of materials for a novel. In finding or failing to find these things a romance of a very original kind with many conflicting interests has been evolved.
THE QUEST OF THE GOLDEN ROSE
By John Oxenham, Author of 'The Long Road.' Crown 8vo, 6s. [August
By 'The Golden Rose' the author means the Spirit of Romance--Love--and all that pertains thereto. The story tells how three very typical Englishmen--surgeon--artist--barrister--encounter it in odd fashion while tramping the High Alps, and follow it up each in his own peculiar way to his destined end. Their various testings, mental, moral, and physical, make the story, which is replete with the joy, the sorrow, and the tragedy of life.
OLIVIA MARY
By E. Maria Albanesi, Author of 'The Glad Heart.' Crown 8vo, 6s.
[August
In this, her first new novel to be published since The Glad Heart, Madame Albanesi strikes new ground. Although full of able and sympathetic characterization and that elusive charm which belongs to all her books, this story is unlike any that she has yet written. The author deals with a problem which is the outcome of emotions at once simple, even ordinary, and yet at the same time profound and most touching.
SALLY
By Dorothea Conyers, Author of 'Two Impostors and Tinker.' Crown 8vo, 6s. [August
A hunting novel of Irish life. The scene is laid in the wilds of Connemara, where a man suffering from melancholia starts hunting over the mountains and the bogs. A seaside lodge close to him is taken by some strangers, and the plot of the book then turns on the lonely man, who has not spoken for years save when obliged to, being charmed from his loneliness by Sally Stannard, and the subsequent complications which ensue betwixt her and her various lovers.
LAMORNA
By Mrs. A. Sidgwick, Author of 'The Severins.' Crown 8vo, 6s. [August
The story of two girls united by kinship and affection, but divided by character and temperament. Lamorna, the elder one, has to look on while her cousin makes a tragedy of her life and successively becomes the victim of a roue and a mischief-monger. Lamorna's own fate is at one time so enmeshed with her cousin's that she requires all her sense and strength to escape from the toils set by a man who would override all scruple and all honour to win her.
THE HAPPY FAMILY
By Frank Swinnerton, Author of 'The Young Idea.' Crown 8vo, 6s.
[August
The Happy Family is a realistic comedy of life in London suburbs. The scenes are laid princ.i.p.ally in Kentish Town, with excursions to Hampstead, Highgate, and Gospel Oak; while unusual pictures of the publishing trade form a setting to the highly-important office-life of the chief male characters. The interplay of diverse temperaments, the conflict between the ideal and the actual, are the basis of the story, which, however, is concerned with people rather than problems.
DARNELEY PLACE
By Richard Bagot, Author of 'Donna Diana.' Crown 8vo, 6s. [September
The scene of Mr. Richard Bagot's new novel is laid partly in England and partly in Italy. The story turns upon the double life led by a wealthy English landowner in consequence of the abduction in his more youthful days of the daughter of an old Italian house at a period when he had no prospect of succeeding to the position he subsequently attained.
Incidentally, the novel deals with certain phases of Italian Spiritualism, and Mr. Bagot's readers will again resume their acquaintance with some of the most sympathetic characters described in his previous work The Pa.s.sport.
A KNIGHT OF SPAIN
By Marjorie Bowen, Author of 'I Will Maintain.' Crown 8vo, 6s.
[September
This story is laid in the stormy and sombre last half of the sixteenth century, and deals with the fortunes of the Royal House of Spain, the most powerful, cruel, and tragic dynasty of modern Europe. The hero is Charles V's son, the gay, beautiful, and heroic Don Juan of Austria, who rose to an unparalleled renown in Christendom as the victor of Lepanto, intoxicated himself with visions of a crown and the rank of 'Infant' of Spain, and from the moment of his apogee was swiftly cast down by his brother, Philip II, sent to undertake the impossible task of ruling the Low Countries, and left to die, forsaken, of a mysterious illness, at the age of twenty-eight, in a camp outside Namur. The story embraces the greater part of this Prince's short life, which was one glowing romance of love and war, played in the various splendours of Spain, Genoa, Venice, Naples, Sicily, Africa, Paris, and Brussels.
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