THREE GOOD GIANTS.
By FRANÇOIS RABELAIS.
Translated by John Dimitry. With 175 Pictures by Gustave Doré and Anton Robida.
$1.50. Uniform with “Davy and the Goblin,” etc.
“The present beautiful edition of an amusing book cannot fail to amuse thousands of little ones, who perhaps in these days are growing tired of ‘Gulliver’s Travels,’ ‘Robinson Crusoe,’ ‘Alice in Wonderland,’ and ‘The Arabian Nights.’”—The Week.
“Coleridge classes Rabelais with ‘the great creative minds, Shakspeare, Dante, and Cervantes.’ In ‘Three Good Giants,’ children, young and old, will find a story which will vie in delightful interest with ‘Robinson Crusoe.’ The adventures of the hearty, good-natured old king Grandgousier, his son Gargantua, and his grandson Pantagruel, all of them mighty heroes and doers of wonderful deeds, will be read and re-read with ever-increasing enjoyment. In paper, printing, and binding, ‘Three Good Giants’ is everything that a choice holiday hook should be.”—Washington Transcript.
Sent, postpaid, on receipt of price by the publishers,
TICKNOR & CO., BOSTON.