+ Spec. 95: 1040. D. 16, ’05. 270w.

De La Pasture, Elizabeth (Bonham) (Mrs. Henry De La Pasture). Toy tragedy: a story of children. †$1.50. Dutton.

The tragedy is a toy tragedy merely because it deals with children, and the things which make up their weal and woe, and it is a story of, rather than for, children because the tale of the four orphaned little folks and how they learned too early the harder side of human nature and how to cope with it, is really a story for thoughtful grown ups. The death of little Elsie, and the sweet chastened spirit of Jean cast a shadow over the story which the success of the two boys does not dispel.


“The story is well written.”

+ N. Y. Times. 11: 772. N. 24, ’06. 80w.

“It is an attractive children’s story, although the situations are just the least bit improbable, and there is a touch of false sentiment in the relations between the good little sister and the pretty spoiled one.”

Dellenbaugh, Frederick Samuel. [Breaking the wilderness]: the story of the conquest of the far West. **$3.50. Putnam.

“A very readable book, which has the great attraction of a thoroughly humane and reasonable point of view; nor is the drift of the main argument less interesting to follow because some conclusions differ from those of several who have gone before in the same track of adventure.”

+ + Acad. 69: 1353. D. 30, ’05. 1170w.