“There is no question that ‘The gates of Kamt’ ranks high in its own class as a piece of pure imaginative audacity.” Frederic Taber Cooper.
| + − | Bookm. 25: 601. Ag. ’07. 520w. |
“Granted her situation, the author has made the human heart terribly convincingly true to it.”
| + − | Ind. 63: 515. Ag. 29, ’07. 270w. |
“Baroness Orczy has a vivid imagination and a fertile fancy, and she has woven a gorgeous web of splendid pageants and beautiful scenes and no end of exciting adventures.”
| + | N. Y. Times. 12: 504. Ag. 17, ’07. 150w. | |
| Outlook. 86: 610. Jl. 20, ’07. 40w. |
Ormond, Alexander T. Concepts of philosophy. 3 pts. *$4. Macmillan.
6–35520.
The three parts to Professor Ormond’s book are, “(1) an analysis which sets forth the two methods by which man seeks to realize his world: the method of external observation ... and the method of inner reflection ... (2) a synthesis which, while it justifies the two methods revealed by the analysis, sets forth the necessity of a synthesis of them and an attempt to realize it; (3) a series of deductions, which might more properly be called corollaries, dealing with a number of themes of general philosophical interest.” (Nation.)