NEW WINE
By AGNES AND EGERTON CASTLE
‘Mr and Mrs Egerton Castle are old hands at the game, and can be relied on to tell a good story and tell it well.’—Daily Chronicle.
‘Not only very readable but worth pondering over.’—British Weekly.
Extra Crown 8vo. 7s. net.
(Second Impression.)
THE PLAIN GIRL’S TALE
By H. H. BASHFORD
The Plain Girl’s Tale, by H. H. Bashford, is the longest novel that the author of The Corner of Harley Street has yet written, and the first that he has produced since the publication of Pity the Poor Blind, six years ago. Though dealing with the adventures and development of a girl of the artisan class in various spheres of contemporary life, it stands apart from the war and is in no sense merely topical. In the delineation of the central character, through whose eyes most of the action of the novel is seen, the author has endeavoured to expand the ethical theme that was the basis of his previous novel.
Extra Crown 8vo. 7s. 6d. net.