+Int. Studio. 30: 276. Ja. ’07. 320w.

“His work from the mere fact of its bulk could never serve as a guide-book. The want of maps, too, is a serious drawback in a practical hand-book. On the other hand, for those who ask for charming impressions, the volume is too practical, too conscientious. Very different and full of detail are his architectural descriptions, and here we feel him thoroughly at home.”

+ −Lond. Times. 5: 400. N. 30, ’06. 1360w.
N. Y. Times. 11: 876. D. 15, ’06. 310w.

“Mr. Jackson has discovered and described three or four times as many things as the ordinary traveler would find out for himself, unless he were, indeed, a many-sided man.”

+N. Y. Times. 12: 456. Jl. 20, ’07. 330w.

“It contains much information clearly and compactly put. Nevertheless, we wish that the author’s manner were more vivacious, and that the color of the history described were as equally evident as its outline.”

+ −Outlook. 85: 904. Ap. 20, ’07. 140w.

“Mr. Jackson has described and drawn with a care worthy of all praise. One regrets a little this somewhat stolid tone as one turns over the only work of value which an Englishman has ever written on this region.”

+ −Sat. R. 103: 207. F. 16, ’07. 860w.

Jackson, Mrs. Gabrielle E. S. Wee Winkles and her friends. †$1.25. Harper.