THE HUDSON LIBRARY
Registered as Second-Class Matter.
16°, paper, 50 cts.; 12°, cloth, $1.00 and $1.25.
I. Love and Shawl-Straps. By Annette Lucile Noble.
"Decidedly a success."—Boston Herald.
II. Miss Hurd: An Enigma. By Anna Katharine Green.
"Miss Hurd fulfils one's anticipations from start to finish. She keeps you in a state of suspense which is positively fascinating."—Kansas Times.
III. How Thankful was Bewitched. By J. K. Hosmer.
"A picturesque romance charmingly told. The interest is both historical and poetic."—Independent.
IV. A Woman of Impulse. By Justin Huntley McCarthy.
"It is a book well worth reading, charmingly written, and containing a most interesting collection of characters that are just like life...."—Chicago Journal.
V. Countess Bettina. By Clinton Ross.
"There is a charm in stories of this kind, free from sentimentality, and written only to entertain."—Boston Times.
VI. Her Majesty. By Elizabeth K. Tompkins.
"It is written with a charming style, with grace and ease, and very pretty unexpected turns of expression."—Droch, in N. Y. Life.
VII. God Forsaken. By Frederic Breton.
"A very clever book.... The characters are well and firmly drawn."—Liverpool Mercury.
VIII. An Island Princess. By Theodore Gift.
"A charming and often brilliant tale."—Literary World.
IX. Elizabeth's Pretenders. By Hamilton Aïdé.
"It is a novel of character, of uncommon power and interest, wholesome, humorous, and sensible in every chapter."—Bookman.
X. At Tuxter's. By G. B. Burgin.
"A very interesting story. The characters are particularly well drawn."—Boston Times.
XI. At Cherryfield Hall. By Frederic H. Balfour (Ross George Deering).
"This is a brilliantly-told tale, the constructive ingenuity and literary excellence of which entitle the author to a place of honor in the foremost rank of contemporary English romancists."—London Telegraph.
XII. The Crime of the Century. By R. Ottolengui.
"It is one of the best-told stories of its kind we have read, and the reader will not be able to guess its ending easily."—Boston Times.
XIII. The Things that Matter. By Francis Gribble.
"A very amusing novel, full of bright satire directed against the New Woman and similar objects."—London Speaker.
XIV. The Heart of Life. By W. H. Mallock.
"Interesting, sometimes tender, and uniformly brilliant.... People will read Mr. Mallock's 'Heart of Life,' for the extraordinary brilliance with which he tells his story."—Daily Telegraph.
XV. The Broken Ring. By Elizabeth K. Tompkins.
"A romance of war and love in royal life, pleasantly written and cleverly composed for melodramatic effect in the end."—Independent.
XVI. The Strange Schemes of Randolph Mason. By Melville D. Post.
"This book is very entertaining and original ... ingeniously constructed ... well worth reading."—N. Y. Herald.
XVII. That Affair Next Door. By Anna Katharine Green.
"The success of this is something almost unprecedented. Its startling ingenuity, sustained interest, and wonderful plot shows that the author's hand has not lost its cunning."—Buffalo Inquirer.
XVIII. In the Crucible. By Grace Denio Litchfield.
"The reader will find in this book bright, breezy talk, and a more than ordinary insight into the possibilities of human character."—Cambridge Tribune.
XIX. Eyes Like the Sea. By Maurus Jókai.
"A strikingly original and powerful story."—London Speaker.
XX. An Uncrowned King. By S. C. Grier.
"Original and uncommonly interesting."—Scotsman.
XXI. The Professor's Dilemma. By A. L. Noble.
"A bright, entertaining novel ... fresh, piquant, and well told."—Boston Transcript.
XXII. The Ways of Life. Two Stories. By Mrs. Oliphant.
"As a work of art we can praise the story without reserve."—London Spectator.
XXIII. The Man of the Family. By Christian Reid.
"A Southern story of romantic and thrilling interest."—Boston Times.
XXIV. Margot. By Sidney Pickering.
"We have nothing but praise for this excellently written novel."—Pall Mall Gazette.
XXV. The Fall of the Sparrow. By M. C. Balfour.
"A book to be enjoyed ... of unlagging interest and original in conception."—Boston Times.
XXVI. Elementary Jane. By Richard Pryce.
"A heartfelt, sincere, beautiful love story, told with infinite humor."—Chicago Times-Herald.
XXVII. The Man of Last Resort. By Melville D. Post.
"The author makes a strong plea for moral responsibility in his work, and his vivid style and undeniable earnestness must carry great weight with all thinking readers. It is a notable book."—Boston Times.
XXVIII. The Confession of Stephen Whapshare. By Emma Brooke.
In preparation:
XXIX. The Chase of an Heiress. By Christian Reid.
XXX. Lost Man's Lane. By Anna Katharine Green.