+ −Lit. D. 35: 577. O. 19, ’07. 620w.

“The author has taken plenty of space and filled his stage with more men and women, girls and boys, than we can enumerate. But they are all drawn with such skill and knowledge that one closes the book with a pleasant sense of its abundant vitality, breadth, and charm.”

+Lond. Times. 6: 309. O. 11, ’07. 450w.
Nation. 85: 187. Ag. 29, ’07. 320w.
N. Y. Times. 12: 535. S. 7, ’07. 670w.

“An absorbing story.”

+N. Y. Times. 12: 652. O. 19, ’07. 30w.

“The present volume is a genuine piece of work, alive and tingling with nervous energy, although it is inferior in some respects to Mr. Chambers’s best work.”

+ −Outlook. 87: 44. S. 7, ’07. 260w.

“It is in more than one respect far more pleasant than the average novel of American society.”

+Sat. R. 104: 549. N. 2, ’07. 220w.

Champlain, Samuel de. [Voyages and explorations of Samuel de Champlain] (1604–1616) narrated by himself; tr. by Annie Nettleton Bourne, together with the voyage of 1603, reprinted from Purchas his pilgrimes; ed. with introd. and notes by Edward Gaylord Bourne. 2v. ea. **$1. Barnes.