The Wrong Man. By Gertrude Garrison.
"'The Wrong Man' is not in the least sensational—not the kind of a story to set people talking about its possible consequences on the minds of unseasoned readers. Nothing feverish, questionable, or coarse in it. Much rare qualities does it possess, which give it distinction in these days of rankly flavored fiction."—Philadelphia Herald.
A Boston Girl. By Rev. Arthur Swaze.
"Those who read 'A Boston Girl' will like it, and those who do not read it will, if they only knew it, miss spending an agreeable hour or two."—San Francisco Call.
A Drummer's Diary. By Charles S. Plummer.
What Dreams May Come. By Mrs. Gertrude Atherton.
"The interest of the story lies in its all-absorbing plot, its strong dramatic treatment, and the bold handling of one of the most difficult and least used subjects of literature."—Rochester Herald.
"There is good work and strong work in the book, and it is quite enough to make one hope it is not the last the authoress will write."—N. Y. Journalist.
Bella-Demonia. By Selina Dolaro. Madame Dolaro's Posthumous Novel.
This work, founded on a drama by Madame Dolaro, shortly to be produced, is an historical novel of pure incident. It is composed of a series of startling dramatic situations, founded on facts not hitherto published in connection with the Russo-Turkish War of 1877-8, of which it is an accurate history of absorbing interest.
Mes Amours: Poems. Passionate and Playful. By Selina Dolaro.