| + | Bookm. 26: 268. N. ’07. 460w. |
“More than once the narrative causes one’s breath to come unevenly—a sure test of a story of adventure. It would have gone all the better for the absence of certain over-frequent and rather sententious little asides, chiefly on the feminine character.”
| + − | Lond. Times. 6: 309. O. 11, ’07. 480w. |
“He is merely, as the author of some thirty-five novels should be, extraordinarily adept, a master of his craft, as a craft.”
| + | Nation. 85: 496. N. 28, ’07. 450w. | |
| N. Y. Times. 12: 652. O. 19, ’07. 40w. |
“The tale is told with Mr. Crawford’s usual skill and more than his usual vivacity.”
| + | Outlook. 87: 622. N. 23, ’07. 110w. |
“His admitted acquaintance with his subject exempts him from the imputation of having studied it for a purpose, yet thereby making more flagrant his transposition of twentieth-century manners and morals into the corrupt decrepitude of Constantinople in 1376.”
| + − | Sat. R. 104: sup. 7. O. 19, ’07. 750w. |
Crawford, Francis Marion. [Lady of Rome.] †$1.50. Macmillan.