One of the Visconti. By Eva Wilder Brodhead.
“Pathos, dramatic movement, lightness, and fine touches of character are deftly blended.”
Madame Delphine. By George W. Cable.
“There are few living American writers who can reproduce for us more perfectly than Mr. Cable does, the speech, the manners, the whole social atmosphere of a remote time and a peculiar people.”—New York Tribune.
The Suicide Club. By Robert Louis Stevenson.
“Readers of the ‘New Arabian Nights’ will remember ‘The Suicide Club’ as one of the most thoroughly fascinating of the stories in that volume. It is now published for the first time in America in a separate volume and is certain to be one of the most popular in the dainty Ivory Series.”—Bost. Advertiser.
An Inheritance. By Harriet Prescott Spofford.
“A splendid example of the genuine worth that can be crowded into a few pages.”—Boston Herald.
A Master Spirit. By Harriet Prescott Spofford.
“‘A Master Spirit’ is quite in Mrs. Spofford’s old vein—the vein in which she made herself beloved thirty years ago in the pages of the Atlantic Monthly. It is full of music, color, young life and passion.”—St. Paul Pioneer Press.