12°. $1.35

Perhaps the most important work of imagination yet written under the influence of the war. A French military hospital is the scene of the story, and its chief characters are a famous Paris surgeon and a young wounded officer, whose fervent Catholic piety is in sharp contrast with the doctor’s philosophic materialism. Death threatens both, and their opposing theories with regard to it are displayed in their relation to a drama of the most intense human passion.


G. P. Putnam’s Sons

New YorkLondon

Halt!
Who’s There?

By the Author of

“Aunt Sarah and the War”

75 cents net. Postage additional

A volume comparable to Aunt Sarah and the War from the pen of the author of that book. The scene is laid in a hospital, but the cases recorded are those of men who, though wounded in body, are spiritually whole. It is the ideals of England,—the essential England that, when the hour strikes, is all courage—that manifest themselves throughout. And be it said that it is an epitome not only of the spirit of England but of the United Kingdom, with the emphasis on the united. There is a fine strain of kindness and broad sympathy running through the book, and much of poignancy in the personal dramas glimpsed through its pages.