HARPER & BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS [[239]]
MARTIN BROOK
By MORGAN BATES
This is the third of the twelve One-a-Month American Novels to be published during 1901.
“It is written in a style unknown nowadays, … with an impressive power revealed at each crisis of the tale, which makes the pulses stir and the eye glisten. What a book for the opening of the twentieth century!”—Julian Hawthorne, in the Journal, New York.
“A very striking book, and one that I am quite sure will take an enviable place in line with record-breakers. It is the third of the ‘American Novel Series,’ and is entitled ‘Martin Brook.’ I finished it at one sitting, so intense was my interest in it.”—Buffalo Commercial, N. Y.
“The third of the ‘American Novel Series,’ ‘Martin Brook,’ by Morgan Bates, appeals to the best in man and woman, and is a credit alike to author and publishers.… ‘Martin Brook’ is indeed an American novel, and of the best kind.”—Philadelphia Daily Evening Telegraph.
“One’s interest is caught and held by the hero from the moment of his first appearance in its pages.… There has not been a stronger scene [the library scene] written to revive the interest of jaded novel readers for many a day.”—N. Y. Commercial Advertiser.
“The story is told in a vigorous manner, and is certainly out of the common run of fiction as it is told nowadays.”—New York Sun.
Comments from various reviewers: