“It is not easy for the amateur to estimate the value of this work to the members of the healing profession, but every one must recognize that it is most conscientiously done.”

+ Acad. 70: 449. My. 12, ’06. 870w.

“Most excellent reading for the layman, the physiologist, and the student of psychology.”

+ + Ath. 1906, 1: 549. My. 5. 550w.

“If ‘The dissociation of a personality’ were a work of the imagination, it would be a noteworthy production. That it is, instead, the latest work of science concerning the human soul shows how far we have traveled from the invisible Ego of our fathers.” E. T. Brewster.

+ + Atlan. 98: 425. S. ’06. 910w. + Cath. World. 83: 272. My. ’06. 620w.

“A distinctly notable contribution to our comprehension of the vicissitudes of personality.”

+ Dial. 40: 266. Ap. 16, ’06. 430w.

“This humorous, pathetic and tragic story is written with the vivacity of a romance and apparently without sacrificing scientific accuracy.”