| + + | Ind. 59: 1159. N. 16, ‘05. 60w. |
“It has many of the characteristic defects of the author, but it has also, in a very marked degree, his particular merits; it is vigorous, original, full of life, and, above all, draws its material straight from the original sources.”
| + + — | Lond. Times. 4: 298. S. 22, ‘05. 1330w. (Review of v. 1 and 2.) |
“Much of this is now ‘common form,’ after the researches of Schürer, not to speak of the now antiquated work of Dollinger, but Harnack puts his points with less pedantry than the former, and with better equipped scholarship than the latter. Yet much will be new even to the expert student.”
| + + | N. Y. Times. 10: 364. Je. 3, ‘05. 580w. (Review of v. 1.) |
“The subject of course is interesting; the treatment is not, except to those who dig deeply into theology.”
| + | N. Y. Times. 10: 676. O. 14, ‘05. 220w. (Review of v. 2.) | |
| + + | Outlook. 81: 333. O. 7, ‘05. 370w. (Review of v. 1.) | |
| + + | Spec. 95: 656. O. 28, ‘05. 1590w. |
Harold, Childe, pseud. See Field, Edward Salisbury.
Harper, Vincent. Mortgage on the brain. [†]$1.50. Doubleday.
“The strange woman who is the central personage of this queer story has three distinct personalities.... [She] is Lady Torbeth, the cultivated, self-centered, high-minded wife of a British peer.... She is also a Miss Errington, neurotic and erotic, and a Miss Leighton, sentimental and innocent.... The problem is to expel the two superfluous personalities from the brain of Lady Torbeth. This is accomplished by ... the employment of radio-activity, electricity, hypnotism, and mumbo-jumbo jargon.”—N. Y. Times.