A LITTLE LIST OF DELIGHTFUL BOOKS TO READ BY

Sir G. Parker, M.P.
H. G. Wells
Jack London
E. F. Benson
John Galsworthy
H. de Vere Stacpoole
Philip Gibbs
Joseph Conrad
Stephen Crane
Duncan Schwann
Robert Hichens
Lloyd Osbourne
R. L. Stevenson
Richard Harding Davis
D. D. Wells
Baroness von Hutten
Frank Danby
Elizabeth Robins
Florence C. Price
Sybil Spottiswoode
Mrs. Henry Dudeney
Justin Huntly McCarthy
Eleanor Abbott
Charles Turley
Flora Annie Steel
Eleanor Mordaunt
Mrs. Hodgson Burnett
E. L. Voynich
Maxwell Gray

On all Bookstalls and of all Booksellers

LONDON

WILLIAM HEINEMANN

MCMXII


HEINEMANN'S 1s NET NOVELS

MOLLY MAKE-BELIEVE

By ELEANOR HALLOWEL ABBOTT

A New Novel

Was that boy a fool? Or did he behave a trifle imprudently in trying circumstances? It is difficult to say till you know Molly, who is described by the press as "one of the most lovable, fascinating and wholly adorable little heroines whose acquaintance any man has made for years." One thing is certain, no sooner do you make Molly's acquaintance than you introduce her to all your friends.

THE WEAVERS

By Sir GILBERT PARKER

Author of "The Ladder of Swords," etc.

Sir Gilbert Parker is one of our finest romance writers of the present day. This is a story of Egypt—full of rich colour, brilliant flowing descriptions. It has the flavour of the Desert, the Nile and the indefinable sense of immortality that belongs to the land of the Pharaohs.

TOTO

By H. DE VERE STACPOOLE

Author of "The Blue Lagoon," etc.

Written with that verve and wonderfully infectious humour which is characteristic of this author. The Outlook says: "That rare and delightful thing, a French novel written in English."


THREE BOOKS

By BARONESS VON HUTTEN

PAM

Pam is a "classic" before her time so to speak. People are compared to "Pam"; so to their disadvantage are most girl heroines of the novels. She is inimitable, by herself, and oh! so wholly charming!