Manual of Human Microscopical Anatomy. By A. Kolliker, Professor of Anatomy and Physiology in Wurzburg. Translated by Geo. Bush, F.R.S., and Thomas Huxley, F.R.S. Edited, with notes and additions, by J. Da Costa, M.D. Illustrated by 313 engravings on wood. One vol. 8vo. $3.75.

It would be useless for us to attempt a review of this work, for the text is so fully illustrated by engravings, and is so intimately associated with them, that we cannot extract any part as a sample of the style, without weakening its force, for the want of its accompanying illustration. The book must be read and studied before an adequate idea can be formed of its value and excellence. The book comes from such high authority, and is indorsed by such competent judges, as to make it at once indispensable to the student of microscopic anatomy. We hope it will have an extensive circulation.—Western Lancet.

The reputation of Professor Kolliker, acquired by his former and larger work on microscopical anatomy, will be enhanced by this text book on Histology, for such it is destined to be pre eminently. The text is fully illustrated by engravings, greatly adding to the value of the work, and accompanied by explicit explanations of the figures. We commend it to the profession, and to students especially, as worthy of their patronage.—N. Y. Medical Gazette.

Drake’s Diseases of the North American Valley.

A Systematic Treatise, Historical, Etiological, and Practical, on the principal diseases of the interior valley of North America, as they appear in the Caucasian, African, Indian, and Esquimaux varieties of its population. By Daniel Drake, M.D. Edited by S. Hanbury Smith, M.D., formerly Professor of the Theory and Practice of Medicine in Starling Medical College, Ohio; and Francis G. Smith, M.D., Professor of the Institute of Medicine in the medical department of Pennsylvania College, Philadelphia. One vol. 8vo. Sheep, $5.00.

Dr. Drake’s great reputation, and his extensive practice in the western country, gives great value and decisive authority to this treatise on the diseases prevalent in the valley of the Mississippi. While the work is of great interest to the general practitioner in other parts of the country, to the Western and Southwestern members of the medical profession it will hereafter be considered an indispensable book of reference and instruction.

Horner’s United States Dissector.

Nerves of the neck and tongue.