A strong tale of human loves and hopes set in a background of the granite mountain-tops of remote New England.
Hugh Armstrong, the hero, is one of the pronouncedly high class character delineations of a quarter century.
THE REASON WHY. By Elinor Glyn.
A fine love story, the chief interest lies in the personality of a beautiful girl whose uncle arranges a match for her with a titled Englishman.
THE PLACE OF HONEYMOONS. By Harold MacGrath.
Courtlandt, the young American hero, is a typical MacGrath creation. He is past thirty, without a wife, and so rich that he cannot get rid of his money fast enough. No love plot was ever more original.
AUNT JANE OF KENTUCKY. By Eliza Calvert Hall.
This story is destined to make a strong appeal to every human heart. Everyone is sure to love Aunt Jane and her neighbors, her quilts and her flowers, her stories and her quaint, tender philosophy.
THE POSTMASTER. By Joseph C. Lincoln.
"The Postmaster" has more pure fun in it than anything Mr. Lincoln has written recently. The episode where the Christian Science lady meets the nervous old gentleman in the home of the spiritualist is uproarious.