APSLEY CHERRY-GARRARD’S The Worst Journey in the World, describing, in its two volumes, Scott’s last Antarctic expedition, 1910-13.

Mediterranean.

V. C. SCOTT O’CONNOR’S A Vision of Morocco, which is both historical and descriptive, and C. E. ANDREWS’S Old Morocco and the Forbidden Atlas, written in a distinguished prose.

C. R. ASHBEE’S A Palestine Notebook, the result of administrative experience in 1918-22. The book has interesting personal portraits of Sir Herbert Samuels, General Allenby, Lord Robert Cecil, Lord Morley, the late Lord Northcliffe, Lord Curzon, and others.

G. K. CHESTERTON’S The New Jerusalem.

ERNEST PEIXOTTO’S Through Spain and Portugal, where the author’s illustrations are so happily wedded to the text.

ROSITA FORBES’S The Secret of the Sahara: Kufara.

South America.

C. REGINALD ENOCK’S Republics of Central and South America, his Spanish America (two volumes), his Ecuador, his Peru, and his Mexico.

LEO E. MILLER’S In the Wilds of South America, an account of six years’ explorations.