TIMES.–"There are very many, not only among educated people who take an interest in science, but even among specialists, who will welcome a work of reasonable compass and handy form containing a trustworthy treatment of the various departments of Natural History by men who are familiar with, and competent to deal with, the latest results of scientific research. Altogether, to judge from this first volume, the Cambridge Natural History promises to fulfil all the expectations that its prospectus holds out."
FIELD.–"We know of no book available to the general reader which affords such a vast fund of information on the structure and habits of molluscs."
KNOWLEDGE.–"If succeeding volumes are like this one, the Cambridge Natural History will rank as one of the finest works on natural history ever published."
ATHENÆUM.–"The series certainly ought not to be restricted in its circulation to lecturers and students only; and, if the forthcoming volumes reach the standard of the one here under notice the success of the enterprise should be assured."
MANCHESTER GUARDIAN.–"We have only to congratulate the naturalists of Cambridge on the success of this first instalment of their new venture, and to express the opinion that, if the succeeding volumes are completed in the same style, the work will fill a distinct gap in zoological literature."
INSECTS AND CENTIPEDES.
NOW READY. VOLUME V.
Peripatus. By Adam Sedgwick, M.A., F.R.S.–Myriapods. By F. G. Sinclair, M.A.–Insects. Part I. By David Sharp, M.A. Cantab., M.B. Edin., F.R.S.
FIELD.–"Although written for the student and the specialist, the book is not the less adapted to all intelligent readers who wish to make themselves thoroughly acquainted with the habits, structure, and the modern classification of the animals of which it treats. To such it cannot be recommended too strongly."
SCIENCE GOSSIP.–"Every library, school, and college in the country should possess this work, which is of the highest educational value."