| + + — | Bookm. 21: 386. Je. ‘05. 1640w. |
“A novel of dignity and importance out of material that if treated less intelligently would be simply sensational.” C. A. Pratt.
| + + | Critic. 47: 185. Ag. ‘05. 470w. |
“It is a great triumph, thus out of commonplace materials, and by the use of strictly legitimate methods, to produce a work of such singular power, and Dr. Mitchell deserves the warmest congratulations upon his success.” Wm. Morton Payne.
| + + + | Dial. 39: 42. Jl. 16, ‘05. 490w. |
“The second section of the book is, in fact, open to this dilemma. If Constance is in her right mind, the story of her revenge is inexplicable and impossible. If she is not, her madness removes it out of the range of subjects capable of being made to appeal to the imagination of the reader by means of the art of the novelist.” Herbert W. Horwill.
| — — + | Forum. 37: 104. Jl. ‘05. 1000w. | |
| + + | Nation. 80: 441. Je. 1, ‘05. 600w. |
“This is a good story.”
| + + | Ind. 58: 1011. My. 4, ‘05. 630w. | |
| + | N. Y. Times. 10: 299. My. 6, ‘05. 540w. |
“It is a tale wherein the psychological element, however, does overcloud the romantic interest.”