And what People thought of Him.
By PAUL LEICESTER FORD.
12mo. $1.50.
The Nation further says he throws “floods of light on the raison d’être, origin, and methods of the dark figure that directs the destinies of our cities.... So strongly imagined and logically drawn that it satisfies the demand for the appearance of truth in art.... Telling scenes and incidents and descriptions of political organization, all of which are literal transcripts of life and fact—not dry irrelevancies thrown in by way of imparting information, but lively detail, needful for a clear understanding of Stirling’s progress from the humble chairmanship of a primary to the dictator’s throne.... In the use of dramatic possibilities, Mr. Ford is discreet and natural, and, without giving Stirling a heroic pose, manages to win for him very hearty sympathy and belief. Stirling’s private and domestic story is well knit with that of his public adventures.”
The Literary World says: “Of the mismanagement and villainy practiced in the wards, of bossism, obstructions to reform, wranglings and riots, we have had more or less in fiction, but nothing like this.... Pages which read like actual history.... A fine, tender love story.... A very unusual, but, let us believe, a possible, character.... Peter Stirling is a man’s hero.... Very readable and enjoyable.”
The Boston Advertiser says: “The book is sure to excite attention and win popularity.”
HENRY HOLT & CO., New York.