And other Kentucky Articles.

OUTLOOK.—“His work has purity, delicacy, and unfailing charm. He gives you matter for laughter, matter for tears, and matter to think upon, with a very fine hand.”

PALL MALL GAZETTE.—“Mr. Allen has attained to an enviable position; it is his to interpret his native country to the world, and it is not easy to imagine a better interpreter. These four volumes are worthy of the author of ‘The Choir Invisible.’”

WINSTON CHURCHILL

Price 6s.

The Crisis

[290th Thousand]

DAILY TELEGRAPH.—“‘The Crisis’ is a story of the American Civil War, a theme as inspiring to the American writer of genius as the English Civil War has proved to some of our best romancers. But, so far as we are aware, there has hitherto been no novel on that subject produced in America to equal either the ‘Woodstock’ of Sir Walter Scott or Whyte-Melville’s ‘Holmby House.’ That reproach is at length removed by Mr. Churchill, and ‘The Crisis’ will bear comparison with either of these justly famous books.”

LITERATURE.—“As well executed a novel as we have come across for many a long day.”