BY KIRK MUNROE.
“Captain Mayne Reid and Gustave Aimard find a worthy successor in Mr. Kirk Munroe.”—St. James’s Gazette.
“Captain Mayne Reid and Gustave Aimard find a worthy successor in Mr. Kirk Munroe.”—St. James’s Gazette.
With Crockett and Bowie: A Tale of Texas. ByKirk Munroe. With 8 page Illustrations byVictor Perard. 5s.
“Mr. Munroe has constructed his plot with undoubted skill, and his descriptions of the combats between the Texans and the Mexicans are brilliantlygraphic. This is in every sense one of the best books for boys that has been produced this season.”—Spectator.
“Mr. Munroe has constructed his plot with undoubted skill, and his descriptions of the combats between the Texans and the Mexicans are brilliantlygraphic. This is in every sense one of the best books for boys that has been produced this season.”—Spectator.
Through Swamp and Glade: A Tale of the Seminole War. ByKirk Munroe. With 8 Illustrations byVictor Perard. 5s.
“The hero ofThrough Swamp and Gladewill find many ardent champions, and the name of Coachoochie become as familiar in the schoolboy’s ear as that of the headmaster.”—St. James’s Gazette.
“The hero ofThrough Swamp and Gladewill find many ardent champions, and the name of Coachoochie become as familiar in the schoolboy’s ear as that of the headmaster.”—St. James’s Gazette.
At War with Pontiac: or, The Totem of the Bear. ByKirk Munroe. With 8 Illustrations byJ. Finnemore. 5s.
“Is in the best manner of Cooper. There is a character who is the parallel of Hawkeye, as the Chingachgooks and Uncas have likewise their counterparts.”—The Times.
“Is in the best manner of Cooper. There is a character who is the parallel of Hawkeye, as the Chingachgooks and Uncas have likewise their counterparts.”—The Times.
The White Conquerors of Mexico: A Tale of Toltec and Aztec. ByKirk Munroe. With 8 Illustrations byW. S. Stacey. 5s.
“Mr. Munroe gives most vivid pictures of the religious and civil polity of the Aztecs, and of everyday life, as he imagines it, in the streets and market-places of the magnificent capital of Montezuma.”—The Times.
“Mr. Munroe gives most vivid pictures of the religious and civil polity of the Aztecs, and of everyday life, as he imagines it, in the streets and market-places of the magnificent capital of Montezuma.”—The Times.