+ – Ath. 1906. 1: 603. My. 19. 280w.

“But it is not merely for its adherence to an academic formula that ‘Lady Baltimore’ is to be praised. It is good to read because of its characterisation, its geniality and its ideas.” Edward Clark Marsh.

+ + – Bookm. 23: 296. My. ’06. 1180w. + Critic. 48: 509. Je. ’06. 980w.

“Like Mr. Owen Wister’s other fiction, is defective on the side of construction, but the defect is atoned for by the author’s powers of characterization and his narrative charm.” Wm. M. Payne.

+ – Dial. 40: 365. Je. 1, ’06. 410w.

“It is doubtful if any other author has so accurately touched the keynote of the real South, or contrasted it so shrewdly with that of the North.”

+ + + Ind. 60: 1159. My. 17, ’06. 950w.

“He has given us the most courteous, intelligent and veracious interpretation of Southern life ever published without losing a single man by violence out of the tale.”

+ + Ind. 61: 1160. N. 15, ’06. 50w.

“Mr. Wister brings to this new environment all the fine play and parry of style, all the insight, all the certainty of coloring, that carried the West before his compelling pen.”