A MYSTERY AND ITS SOLUTION.
By RIVINGTON PYKE
(Author of "The Man Who Disappeared").
Long 12mo, 132 pp. Cloth, 1/6; Sewed, 1/-.
SOME PRESS OPINIONS.
Whitehall Review.—"Those who love a mystery with plenty of 'go,' and a story which is not devoid of a certain amount of realism, cannot do better than pick up 'Fellow Passengers.' The characters are real men and women, and not the sentimental and artificial puppets to which we have been so long accustomed by our sensationalists. The book is brightly written, and of detective stories it is the best I have read lately."
Weekly Dispatch.—"If you want a diverting story of realism, bordering upon actuality, you cannot do better than take up this bright, vivacious, dramatic volume. It will interest you from first page to last."
Bristol Mercury.—"An exciting and thrilling story. It is very ingeniously constructed and well worked out."
Catholic Times.—"This is a well written story, with a good plot and plenty of incident. From cover to cover there is not a dull page, and the interest keeps up to the end."
Glasgow News.—"It is a thriller.... The sort of book one cannot help finishing at a sitting. Not merely because it is short, but because it rivets.... The author uses his materials with great ingenuity, his plot is cleverly devised, and he very effectively works up to a striking denouement."
"For fear divine Philosophy
Should push beyond her mark, and be
Procuress to the Lords of Hell."—Tennyson.—In Memoriam.