*Irving King, The High School Age. Bobbs-Merrill & Co., $1.00 net. A study of the nature and needs of boys and girls in the first period of adolescence. Written for all who are alive to the problems of this period as well as for school people; gives constructive suggestions for educational problems.

Elizabeth Harrison, A Study of the Child Nature. Chicago Kindergarten College, $1.00. Long recognized as a standard for parents in the study of the development and functions of the child-life.

George E. Dawson, The Right of the Child to Be Well Born. Funk & Wagnalls, $0.75. A plain study of eugenics, non-technical and helpful; includes a chapter on eugenics and religion. To be commended to parents.

George E. Dawson, The Child and His Religion. The University of Chicago Press, $0.75. The religious nature and needs of the child with some suggestions as to method.

*W. Arter Wright, The Moral Conditions and Development of the Child. Jennings & Graham, $0.75. An important and valuable book on the newer views of the religious development of the child-life.

Frederick Tracy and J. Stempfl, The Psychology of Childhood. D. C. Heath & Co., $1.20. Gathers up the general results in the field of child psychology.

*W. G. Koons, The Child's Religious Life. Jennings & Graham, $1.00. From the modern point of view, dealing with some of the interesting problems of the relation of the child to religious life and the development of his religious ideas.

Thomas Stephens, The Child and Religion. Putnam, $1.50. A series of short papers by English writers, particularly on the question of child conversion.

George A. Hubbell, Up through Childhood. Putnam, $1.25. A good general review with special reference to religious problems and religious institutions.

Edith E. R. Mumford, The Dawn of Character. Longmans, Green & Co., $1.20. A very important book, dealing especially with the moral development of young children.