WILLIAM JOHNSTON’S The Waddington Cipher.

H. C. MCNEILE’S The Dinner Club. The six members had each to tell two stories worthy of the dinner, and did! Also H. C. McNeile’s The Black Gang, with its further adventures of Bulldog Drummond.

ALBERT PAYSON TERHUNE’S The Amateur Inn, remarkable not only for its mystery puzzle but for the presence of an irresistible maiden lady who says: “A person not ashamed to lock a door with a key, need not be ashamed to lock his mind with a lie.”

CAROLYN WELL’S Wheels Within Wheels, another story with Penny Wise as the detective. The village idiot is a protagonist.

C. N. and A. M. WILLIAMSON’S The Lady From the Air and their The Night of the Wedding.

When Ghost Meets Ghost.

The “borderland” in F. BRITTEN AUSTEN’S On the Borderland is the region between the conscious and the subconscious, assuming that such a neutral zone exists. The book offers twelve weird stories striking in their ingenuity.

E. F. BENSON’S Spook Stories.

Ordeal by Water.

TRISTRAM TUPPER’S Adventuring is entirely off the beaten track of adventure fiction—the story of a middle-aged, ordinary man whose love for the songs of the Grecian Sappho quickens his imagination to a dream of her beauty and leads him into an homeric sea adventure.