“Though sometimes vivid and even dramatic, it is written in a confused and repetitive style, and occasionally we find contradictions ... and some uncertainty in treating of contemporary Egyptian history.”
| + − | Ath. 1907, 2: 556. N. 2. 460w. |
“On his proper subject, the construction of the temple and the adjoining palaces, our author has much that is interesting to tell us.”
| + − | Spec. 99: 235. Ag. 17, ’07. 250w. |
Calhoun, Mary E. Dorothy’s rabbit stories. †$1. Crowell.
7–24584.
A group of children’s stories which a little southern girl tells to her kitten Kim. “Neighbor rabbit” figures as a thoroly enjoyable hero, and seems to bear kinship to Uncle Remus’s “br’er rabbit.”
“For the child of this decade who has not read ‘Uncle Remus,’ ‘Dorothy’s rabbit stories’ will prove fascinating.”
| + | R. of Rs. 36: 766. D. ’07. 60w. |