Books and FolksByEdward N. Teall“Writing after having had unusual experience with books and people, and in a vein that is as creditable to the books as it must be pleasing to the people, his treatise is of great value.”Evening Post, July 9, 1921.“In a time when so many literary counsellors are drawing attention to the freakish, the rebellious writers, and to the ones who would pioneer new styles and methods it is refreshing to have at hand a book that speaks lovingly for the art of letters, the whole art, and for the individual and unbiased appreciation.“... The book is a most acceptable library companion. There’s no pretense and no posing in all of its pages.”—Oakland Tribune, July 10, 1921.G. P. Putnam’s SonsNew YorkLondon
Books and Folks
ByEdward N. Teall
“Writing after having had unusual experience with books and people, and in a vein that is as creditable to the books as it must be pleasing to the people, his treatise is of great value.”
Evening Post, July 9, 1921.
“In a time when so many literary counsellors are drawing attention to the freakish, the rebellious writers, and to the ones who would pioneer new styles and methods it is refreshing to have at hand a book that speaks lovingly for the art of letters, the whole art, and for the individual and unbiased appreciation.
“... The book is a most acceptable library companion. There’s no pretense and no posing in all of its pages.”—Oakland Tribune, July 10, 1921.
G. P. Putnam’s Sons
New YorkLondon