Outdoor Pastimes of an American Hunter. By Theodore Roosevelt. (With Portrait.) 1 vol.—3918.
The President of the United States is the author of several well-known works. This, the first by his pen to appear in the Tauchnitz Edition, deals exclusively with big-game hunting in North America.
The Call of the Blood. By Robert Hichens. 2 vols.—3919/20.
A Sicilian tragedy, in which an Englishwoman marries a man with the blood of the island in his veins and an unconquerable propensity to revert to the characteristics of its inhabitants.
Memoirs of my Dead Life. By George Moore. 1 v.—3921.
A series of sketches, in some of which the love-affairs of the author’s early life are realistically set before the reader.
Prisoners. By Mary Cholmondeley. 2 vols.—3922/23.
Miss Cholmondeley’s latest work is a splendid study of the action of remorse. The chivalrous victim immured in an Italian prison must have suffered indeed from an appreciation of the fickleness and weakness of woman.
Puck of Pook’s Hill. By Rudyard Kipling. 1 v.—3924.
This new work consists of a series of incidents and chapters from the older history of Britain, told to two young children by the long-dead actors themselves, with the magic help of the “Oldest Old Thing in England.”