“Taken altogether, 'The Sun of Saratoga’ is the best historical novel of American origin that has been written for years, if not, indeed, in a fresh, simple, unpretending, unlabored, manly way, that we have ever read.”—New York Mail and Express.

“A sprightly and spirited romance gracefully written in a crisp, fresh style that is simply delightful to read.”—Philadelphia Press.



“AN EPIC OF THE WEST.”


The Girl at the Halfway House.

A Romance of the Plains. By E. Hough, author of “The Story of the Cowboy.” 12mo. Cloth, $1.50.

The author of “The Girl at the Halfway House,” Mr. E. Hough, gained general recognition by his remarkable book, “The Story of the Cowboy,” published by D. Appleton and Company in this country, and also published in England.

“The Girl at the Halfway House” has been called an American epic by critics who have read the manuscript. The author illustrates the strange life of the great westward movement which became so marked in this country after the civil war. A dramatic picture of a battlefield, which has been compared to scenes in “The Red Badge of Courage,” opens the story. After this “Day of War,” in which the hero and heroine first meet, there comes “The Day of the Buffalo.” The reader follows the course of the hero and his friend, a picturesque old army veteran, to the frontier, then found on the Western plains. The author, than whom no one can speak with fuller knowledge, pictures the cowboy on his native range, the wild life of the buffalo hunters, the coming of the white-topped emigrant wagons, and the strange days of the early land booms. Into this new world comes the heroine, whose family finally settles near at hand, illustrating the curious phases of the formation of a prairie home. The third part of the story, called “The Day of the Cattle,” sketches the wild days when the range cattle covered the plains and the cowboys owned the towns. The fourth part of the story is called “The Day of the Plow,” and in this we find that the buffalo has passed from the adopted country of hero and heroine, and the era of towns and land booms has begun.

Nothing has been written on the opening of the West to excel this romance in epic quality, and its historic interest, as well as its freshness, vividness, and absorbing interest, should appeal to every American reader.