| | | A. L. A. Bkl. 3: 137. My. ’07. ✠ |
“Mr. Stewart forces his tale, and lets it meander over a course as long as his river, and as crooked.”
| | + − | Ath. 1907, 2: 514. O. 26. 120w. |
“Perhaps the worst fault of the book is that, paradoxically enough, the spirit of pure fun holds sway too completely.” Ward Clark.
| | + − | Bookm. 25: 299. My. ’07. 990w. |
“Has given a new boy to literature for Sam Daly is not a Tom Sawyer by any means; he has a personality all his own, and a most attractive one.”
| | + | Ind. 63: 221. Jl. 25, ’07. 330w. |
| |
| | | Lit. D. 34: 678. Ap. 27, ’07. 210w. |
“There is not a false note, a sentence out of key, or—rare finality in books of popular humor—one second of doubtful taste.”
| | + + | Nation. 84: 362. Ap. 18, 07. 450w. |