“The work will appeal alike to those who have an interest in the rejuvenation of an ancient race, and to those who will be attracted by a technique suggestive of the skill of Japanese decorators and of the European masters of line-work.”
| + | Dial. 42: 149. Mr. 1, ’07. 130w. |
“Mr. Levussove leaves the reader not only with an understanding of the highly poetic value of the artist’s work, but with a vivid sympathy for the racial quality of serious aspiration, which he exemplifies.”
| + | Ind. 62: 804. Ap. 4, ’07. 190w. | |
| Lit. D. 34: 103. Ja. 19, ’07. 670w. | ||
| Nation. 84: 140. F. 7, ’07. 150w. |
“Mr. Levussove entertainingly covers his subject, keeping always in mind the fact that the awakening art spirit among the Jews is exemplified by Lilien’s works.”
| + | N. Y. Times. 12: 44. Ja. 26, ’07. 250w. | |
| R. of Rs. 35: 256. F. ’07. 40w. |
* Lewis, Alfred Henry. [When men grew tall; or, The story of Andrew Jackson.] **$2. Appleton.
7–36233.
“Tells the story of Andrew Jackson’s career in, we conceive, precisely the way Andrew Jackson himself would have delighted to tell it.... It has the true Jacksonian flavor of unquenchable ardor to twist the tail of the British lion, supreme contempt for the Spanish Dons, burning antipathy to the ‘corrupt bargainers’ Adams and Clay—poor ‘Machiavelli’ Clay, as Mr. Lewis persists in calling him—and unrestrained enmity for ‘serpentine’ Banker Biddle and the rest of the money crew.”—Outlook.