"This book will mark an epoch in American thought. It is fully up with the times.... It is the prophet of the New Era."—The People, R. I.
"One of the most valuable works drawn out by current discussions on social and economical questions, and one that is sure to take a high place in the permanent and standard literature of the times."—Opinion, Rockland.
"This book is enlightening and inspiring; every thoughtful man and woman should read it."—Tribune, Junction City.
"Mr. Thompson presents the whole question of land and labor reform as clearly as could be desired."—Mail, Chicago.
Prince Coastwind's Victory, or the Fairy Bride of Croton Lake
By Mrs. Niles H. MacNamara. I Vol. illustrated.
"This is a genuine American fairy tale, and, so far as we can remember, the first and only one that can lay claim to the title."—Daily Times, Troy, N. Y.
"It is fanciful and fresh, and written out delightfully."—Philadelphia Press.
"The story is well told and cleverly illustrated in strong and delicate pen and ink drawings."—Brooklyn Eagle.
"A dainty little volume, describing the fate and fortunes of a Fairy Bride."—Times-Democrat, New Orleans.
The Truth about Tristrem Varick
By Edgar Saltus, author of "Mr. Incouls Misadventure," "The Philosophy of Disenchantment," "Balzac"
In this novel Mr. Saltus has treated a subject hitherto unexplored in fiction. The scene is Fifth avenue, the plot a surprise. "There is," some one has said, "as much mud in the upper classes as in the lower—only in the former it is gilded." This aphorism might serve as an epigraph to Tristrem Varick.