88. Stacy's Room, or One Year's Building. (1888.) Same author.
89. Happy Valley. Ann Shannon Monroe. Tells of homesteading experiences in the sage-brush country where the author lived the life of a settler. She first attracted attention by her story, Making a Business Woman, which appeared in Saturday Evening Post. It is said that she has a hand in the editorial columns of the Ladies Home Journal.
90. Heart of the Red Firs. (1908.) Ada Woodruff Anderson.
91. Strain of White. (1909.) Same author.
92. Rim of the Desert. (1914.) Same author. The last of these three has scenes laid in Alaska, on the Sound, at Scenic and in the Wenatchee valley. The development of the desert by irrigation into the fertile fields and the productive orchard, the tragedy of homesickness and starvation in Alaska, the fatal avalanche in the Cascades in the winter of 1909-1910 at Wellington, all are woven into the story. It includes also an attack on the Roosevelt-Pinchot conservation policy which reflects the sentiment somewhat widely held on the Pacific Coast. These features have helped to give the story a wide reading near home but it is a good seller the country over. Very speedily it reached a fourth edition and in its first year sales reached fifty thousand. Mrs. Anderson is the daughter of a Washington pioneer. Those who know her tell us that her home-making and family-raising are as successful as her story-writing. Some one said "She is good for several things and good at them all."
93. The Hired Man. Florence Roney Weir.
94. Busher's Girl. Same author.
95. In Hampton Roads. (1899.) Charles Eugene Banks. A novel of the Civil War.
96. Child of the Sun. (1900.) Same author.
97. Man with a Scar. Ella Holly and Jessie Hoskins; noms de plume, Warren and Alice Fones. A little story from the Christian Science viewpoint.