Mr. EDWARD ARNOLD'S Latest Novels
SOMETHING AFAR
By MAXWELL GRAY, Author of "The Silence of Dean Maitland." Second Impression.
TATLER.—"'Something Afar' is, from the readable point of view, as good a story as any which has been published this season. Personally I don't think that Maxwell Gray has given us anything so good since 'The Silence of Dean Maitland.'"
THE GENTLE LOVER
By FORREST REID, Author of "The Bracknels."
SPECTATOR.—"A delightful comedy of middle age. Mr. Forrest Reid never strikes a jarring note; his style is always delicately attuned to the scene or the mood of the speaker, and we part reluctantly from the companionship of the pleasant people whom he has set before us with such convincing yet unaffected art."
THE VILLAGE IN THE JUNGLE.
By LEONARD WOOLF. Second Edition.
"The Village in the Jungle" is a story which gives a vivid and realistic picture of life in a remote jungle village in Ceylon. The author was in the Ceylon Civil Service.
MORNING POST.—"It is an admirable piece of work, which calls for unqualified praise. We have met here with a new type of humanity drawn from life, and we at once respect and pity it."
TINKER'S HOLLOW
By Mrs. F. E. CRICHTON, Author of "The Soundless Tide," etc. Second Impression.
MORNING POST.—"Mrs. Crichton is to be warmly congratulated on the appearance of this truthful and entrancing story of Ulster village life."
BRITISH WEEKLY.—"This is a most vital book, and full of the true Ulster atmosphere. Mrs. Crichton moves us sometimes to laughter and sometimes to tears. The plot is a good one and well carried through, but the novel excels in its records of the talk of Ulster men and women."
BRIDE ELECT.
By A. M. CHAMPNEYS.
SPECTATOR.—"The book has passion, eloquence, and intensity. It is full of vivid moments."
MORNING POST.—"'Bride Elect' is excellent reading."