| Library 12mo, cloth, decorative, illustrated, 250 pages | $1.25 |
"In Guiana Wilds" may be described as an ethnological romance. A typical young Scotchman becomes, by the force of circumstances, decivilized, and mates with a native woman.
It is a psychological study of great power and ability.
The Gray House of the Quarries. By Mary Harriott Norris.
With a frontispiece etching by Edmund H. Garrett.
| 8vo, cloth decorative, 500 pages | $1.50 |
"The peculiar genre, for which, in a literary sense, all must acknowledge obligation to the author of a new type, is the Dutch-American species. The church-goings, the courtings, the pleasures and sorrows of a primitive people, their lives and deaths, weddings, suicides, births, and burials, are Rembrandt and Rubens pictures on a fresh canvas."—Boston Transcript.
"The fine ideal of womanhood in a person never once physically described will gratify the highest tone of the period, and is an ennobling conception."—Time and the Hour, Boston.
Vivian of Virginia. Being the Memoirs of Our First Rebellion, by John Vivian, Esq., of Middle Plantation, Virginia. By Hulbert Fuller.
With ten full-page illustrations by Frank T. Merrill.