“Those who read ‘Mr Manley’ will not need to be told that G. I. Whitham knows how to write an interesting story. And ‘St John of Honeylea’ is an improvement on her earlier book, more convincing and better written, to say nothing of its possession of an unusually romantic and picturesque atmosphere.”

+ N Y Times 25:236 My 9 ’20 600w

“It is a good book, and many interesting people are to be met in it; not the least of whom are two who live only in the descriptions of the neighbours who have known them, ‘Uncle Charles,’ and his nephew and successor Cecil, the two last owners of the house. They are perhaps more distinctly drawn than any of the actual characters of the story.”

+ Sat R 128:590 D 20 ’19 480w

“The subject sounds familiar, but Mr Whitham has treated it in an original way.”

+ The Times [London] Lit Sup p694 N 27 ’19 450w

WHITIN, CORA BERRY. Wounded words. *$1 Four seas co. 793

20–1007

A little book of rhymed charades designed by the author for the entertainment of convalescent soldiers. At the end a key is provided by which answers may be tested.