—Chicago Record-Herald.
| Third Edition. | $1.50. |
By George Douglas
THE HOUSE WITH THE GREEN SHUTTERS
The first novel of a new master. The work has gained wide-spread recognition on both sides of the water. Three of the most conservative and authoritative publications in England include it among the first twelve of the year. In this country Harper’s Weekly gives it as one of the two most interesting novels of the year.
The critics differ as to with what other master George Douglas should be compared:
The London Times says: “Worthy of the hand that drew ‘Weir of Hermiston,’” and that “Balzac and Flaubert, had they been Scotch, would have written such a book.”
The Spectator: “His masters are Zola and Balzac, but there are few traces of the novice and none of the imitator.”
Vanity Fair: “It moves to its end with all the terrible unity of an Æschylean tragedy.”