CONTENTS

Page
[Preface]5
[William Dean Howells]11
[Bret Harte]27
[Mark Twain]43
["Lew" Wallace]59
[George W. Cable]75
[Henry James]91
[Francis Richard Stockton]107
[Joel Chandler Harris]123
[S. Weir Mitchell]139
[Robert Grant]155
[F. Marion Crawford]169
[James Lane Allen]185
[Thomas Nelson Page]201
[Richard Harding Davis]215
[John Kendrick Bangs]231
[Hamlin Garland]247
[Paul Leicester Ford]263
[Robert Neilson Stephens]279
[Charles D. G. Roberts]299
[Winston Churchill]317

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

Page
[William Dean Howells]Frontispiece
[Bret Harte]27
[George W. Cable]75
[Francis Richard Stockton]107
[S. Weir Mitchell]139
[Robert Grant]155
[F. Marion Crawford ]169
[James Lane Allen]185
[Thomas Nelson Page]201
[Richard Harding Davis]215
[John Kendrick Bangs]231
[Hamlin Garland]247
[Robert Neilson Stephens]279
[Charles D. G. Roberts]299
[Winston Churchill]317

WILLIAM DEAN HOWELLS

Mr. Howells has reached that point of life and success where he can afford to sit down and look back. But he is not that sort of man. He will probably continue to work and to look forward until, in the words of Hamlet, he shuffles off this mortal coil.

William Dean Howells was born in Martin's Ferry, Belmont County, Ohio, March 1, 1837. He has therefore reached the ripe age of sixty-four. When he was three years old his father moved from Martin's Ferry to Hamilton and bought The Intelligencer, a weekly paper. Nine years afterward he sold The Intelligencer and moved to Dayton, becoming proprietor of the Dayton Transcript. This paper had been a semi-weekly, but Mr. Howells changed it to a daily; and his son William went to work for him. It was William's business to rise at four in the morning and sell the paper about town. But the Transcript proved a failure, so the Howells family left Dayton and moved into the country on the banks of the Miami, where for a year a log-cabin was their home.