| * | + | Critic. 47: 478. N. ‘05. 80w. |
“It is a good book to read aloud, but only a chapter or two at a time.”
| + | Ind. 59: 696. S. 21, ‘05. 130w. |
[*] “The unexpected endings of the many humorous situations will keep the reader in a gale of mirth, and when he lays the book down after the last chapter, he will feel that he has found a new friend in Minerva.”
| + | Lit. D. 31: 797. N. 25, ‘05. 520w. |
[*] “Is more in the nature of a vaudeville show than anything else, and it is not possible to describe all of the attractions which Mr. Loomis offers. They are surely worth a reading.”
| + | N. Y. Times. 10: 800. N. 25, ‘05. 460w. | |
| + | Outlook. 81: 88. S. 9, ‘05. 50w. |
“It is not an uproarious story; its humor is quiet; it possesses the subtle turn which is symptomatic of its author.”
| + | Pub. Opin. 39: 384. S. 16, ‘05. 230w. |
Lord, Eliot; Trenor, John J. D.; and Barrows, Samuel June. Italian in America. $1.50. Buck.