This is the first book by Ernest Oldmeadow in the Tauchnitz Edition and is a romance of an exceptionally high order of humour. The chief incidents of the comedy take place in a picturesque French village.
New Chronicles of Rebecca. By Kate Douglas Wiggin. 1 vol.—3964.
A series of charming pictures from the life of a young American child who is already well known to, and a favourite with, many readers of the Tauchnitz Edition.
Her Son. By Horace Annesley Vachell. 1 vol.—3965.
Mr. Vachell’s new story is a touching idyll, in which love and love’s capacity for self-sacrifice form the leading theme.
Merry-Garden, and Other Stories. By “Q” (A. T. Quiller-Couch). 1 v.—3966.
This volume contains seven tales, full of the wholesome humour for which so many of Q’s works are celebrated and all written in his best and inimitable style.
The Getting Well of Dorothy. By MRS. W. K. Clifford. 1 vol.—3967.
A pretty children’s story, which forms interesting, moral, and easy reading for the little ones, especially those of the softer sex. The story takes place chiefly in Montreux and its beautiful environs.
Dead Love has Chains. By M. E. Braddon. 1 vol.—3968.