The Atlantic Monthly.
Important Announcements for the Fall of 1895.
The publishers take pleasure in announcing an unusual amount of good fiction. Early issues of the Atlantic will containThe Apparition of Gran'ther Hill, byRowland E. Robinson;Pilgrim Station, byMary Hallock Foote;Athenaise, a Creole Story, byKate Chopin;The End of the Terror, byRobert Wilson, a Southern writer. Aside from these, there will be stories by Mrs.Wiggin, Henry James, L. Dougall, Ellen Mackubin, and others.
Conspicuous in the Fall issues will be papers of Travel.Lafcadio Hearnwill contribute sketches and interpretations of the new Japan. There will be further papers in Mr. Peabody'sAn Architect's Vacationseries, the forthcoming one being entitledThe Venetian Day. A delightful paper of Spanish travel by Mrs.Miriam Coles Harriscan be promised, andAlice Brownwill write of a visit to the original Cranford.Bradford Torreywill publish further sketches of life and nature in his Tennessee haunts. Other articles of special interest, which can perhaps be classed under this head, will beReminiscences of Eastern Travelby MissHarriet Waters Preston; andJosiah Flynt, who has become an authority on the vagrant, will contribute one of his entertaining studies of tramp life,The Children of the Road.
The subject ofEducationwill, as usual, receive attention. The Atlantic was the first of the leading magazines to make the discussion of important educational questions one of the features of its pages. In early issues will be printed articles by PresidentTucker, of Dartmouth, and ProfessorJ. H. Wright, of Harvard.
The usual departments and the exhaustive book-reviews will continue to be features of each issue.
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