“We would recommend ‘The voice of the South’ to all who have a taste for good prose. To define or describe a good style is always difficult; but in this particular case it is chiefly apparent in the simple and adequate narrative, and in the descriptive passages, which without being either pre-Raphaelite or impressionist, make us see sufficiently all the important detail, and at the same time realise the effect of the whole.”
| + + | Acad. 70: 379. Ap. 21, ’06. 870w. |
“A chatty, descriptive narrative.”
| + | Ath. 1906, 1: 133. F. 3. 150w. |
“The clear, suggestive and beautiful pictures of people, places, and especially camels, bring you back to geographic reality from a placeless world of fancy.”
| + + | Lond. Times. 4: 405. N. 24, ’06. 380w. | |
| N. Y. Times. 11: 612. S. 29, ’06. 310w. |
Watson, Helen H. Andrew Goodfellow: a tale of 1805. $1.50. Macmillan.
The author’s first story which has its setting in the town of Plymouth Dock during the time of Nelson. Its chief interest is concerned with the sea.