98. Mary of Magdala. (1909.) Harriette Gunn Roberson. A fascinating story of Rome and Alexandria and Jerusalem. Told with real dramatic power. Mrs. Roberson has for two years edited a page in one of the publications of the Baptist Church under the title, Heart Talks to Girls on Making the Most of Life. As speaker on the Chautauqua platform she has made many friends through the Northwest.
99. Preliminaries and Other Stories. (1912.) Cornelia Atwood Pratt Comer.
100. The Daughter of a Stoic. (1896.) Same author, before marriage.
101. A Daughter of Martyrs. (1906.) Same author. These are short story collections. Mrs. Corner has of late done a good deal of magazine work of a high order, her contributions usually appearing in the Atlantic. Once when asked for a biography she replied, "I really haven't any. I doubt if any one ever got along so comfortably with so little biography since the world began." Of the town where she used to live she said, "It was a kind of a town which drives one into the inner world in search of excitement." When a publisher asked for a photograph she wrote "I have no photographs of myself except some very old ones in storage and no time to get any new ones."
102. A Rocky Mountain Sketch. Lou Gertrude Diven. It introduces some characters drawn beautifully and clearly as by a master of fiction, yet there is evidence that compels the reader to feel that it is a true narrative. Many stories and essays by Mrs. Diven are in print.
103. Tillicum Tales. (1907.) Seattle Writers' Club. A collection of short stories contributed by members of the club.
104. Unrest, a Story of the Struggle for Bread. (1915.) W. R. Parr. A tale of industrial order, the subject treated from a socialistic standpoint.
105. The Woman Who Went to Alaska. Mrs. Mary L. Kellogg. She has written several books on Alaska under the nom de plume May Kellogg Sullivan. Her home is near Matanuska in Southwestern Alaska where she has spent seven seasons.
JUVENILE
106. Billy Tomorrow. (1909.) Sarah Pratt Carr.