Chapter 14

“The work of Mr. Cawein is not distinctly lyric, although the verse has rhymthic charm.”

Cawein, Madison Julius.Vale of Tempe. *$1.50. Dutton.

“The most surprising thing about Mr. Cawein’s work is the even excellence which characterizes so great a quantity of matter.” Wm. M. Payne.

Cervantes, Saavedra Miguel de.Don Quixote; tr. with introd. by John Quimby. 2v. $2.50. Crowell.

Uniform with the “Thin paper two volume set” this “Don Quixote” is of interest alike to students and library collectors. There is an informing introduction, the first part of which presents the merits and demerits of the edition offered to English readers thru the past two centuries and a half, and the second part of which sketches Cervantes’ life.

Chadwick, John White.Later poems. *$1.25. Houghton.

Chadwick, Samuel.Humanity and God. **$1.50. Revell.

“The one weakness in the otherwise masterful work is in the lowering of the standard of human perfection in order to permit to consciousness the sense of its attainment.” Edward Braislin.

Chamberlain, Charles Joseph.Methods in plant histology. *$2.25. Univ. of Chicago press.

“The book will be very useful to teachers of secondary schools, as well as to independent workers, for it gives in usable and concise form the latest and most approved methods of modern micro-technique.” W. J. G. Land.

Chamberlain, Leander Trowbridge.True doctrine of prayer: with foreword by the Rev. W: R. Huntington. **$1. Baker.

Dr. Chamberlain has presented the doctrine of prayer in a logical succession of paragraphs “each one of which presents truth which no one who desires to think deeply about prayer can afford to lose out of sight.... It is not merely as a healthful exercise for the soul that he would have us think of prayer, but as a potency, a dynamic, an efficient cause.... He is willing to explain, to interpret, to justify, but never to minimize.”

Chamberlin, Thomas Chrowder, and Salisbury, Rollin D.Geology. 3v. v. 1, Processes and their results; v. 2, and 3, Earth history, ea. *$4. Holt.

The first volume of the work appeared in 1904 and is now in its second edition. “In that volume was given a statement of the planetismal hypothesis of earth origin. In these new volumes the hypothesis is developed and applied, and its application requires a new reading of dynamical geology, with a consequent new interpretation of geologic history.... A notable feature of the work is the attention paid to past climates and the use made of them in interpretation.... The treatment of Pleistocene and the human or present periods is unusually full and satisfactory.... The book closes with a very interesting and suggestive discussion of man as a geologic agent, and as influenced by his geologic environment.”—Dial.

“Whether we accept or reject their views, there is no gainsaying the fact that Profs. Chamberlin and Salisbury have produced a very suggestive work, which is likely to exert a marked influence on the teaching of geology in all English-speaking countries.”

“It is not sufficiently complete to be an entirely satisfactory book of reference. For the general reader the book has a charm and freshness not common to scientific texts, but it contains so much new and not yet accepted doctrine that such a reader will need to take careful note of the qualifying phrases. It is to working geologists that the book will make the strongest appeal.” H. Foster Bain.

“For the graduate student and as a reference work for the teacher and general reader the work is, however, indispensable.”

“The arrangement of the book is in most respects well adapted to the requirements of students, and the presentation of the subject matter is always clear.” A. H.

“The principal adverse criticisms that can be made, relate to the minor details of editing—not to the subject-matter or the method of treatment. In the presence of so much that is large, and helpful, and inspiring such criticisms seem like mere quibbling. Not a subject is touched upon in the entire work that does not have the breath of a new life breathed into it.” J. C. Branner.

“The authors give an admirable account of the various stages through which the earth has passed since it became solid, and their beautifully illustrated volumes form one of the most complete and trustworthy geological treatises which have yet been published.”

Chambers, Robert William.Fighting chance.**$1.50. Appleton.

Silvia Landis, a spoiled society girl, and Stephen Siward, who has inherited a weakness for drink, meet at a railway station “and continue the game there begun at a house party where assorted time killers are assembled.... Silvia angles for a new millionaire and plays with Stephen even while she lands him.... The story passes from the house party to the city, where Silvia pursues her social pastimes and retains her golden fiancé and Stephen ... fights the demon rum alone with more or less unsuccess. You have in the meantime club scenes, bridge scenes, scenes of domestic, infelicity, scenes of sordid life, glimpses of the half-world, a panorama of high finance.... In the end ... Mr. Chambers, to achieve his happy ending appropriates a motor car ... and lets it blow up with the marplot.” (N. Y. Times.)

“Mr. Chambers is so clever, has so keen a sense of character, that after enjoying his book, you ungratefully regard him with violent irritation. He has no right not to do even better!His abundant and interesting material is not thoroughly digested.” Mary Moss.

“Such books as this play with the glittering surface of life but have nothing to do with its deeper realities.” Wm. M. Payne.

“A real rival to Mrs. Wharton’s ‘House of Mirth.’”

“The interpretation which Mrs. Wharton attempted of New York society in ‘The house of mirth,’ Robert Chambers has really accomplished in his new novel.”

“Realistic in the extreme and to the extent of introducing slang and even profanity, it still has fine touches of sentiment and reveals an intimate knowledge of a species of human existence which, in a sense is as new and as modern as the motor and skyscraper.”

“With all its palpable defects upon it, this novel was framed for popularity. It is emphatically not for the literary epicure.”

“Mr. Robert W. Chambers has taken the material of Mrs. Wharton’s ‘House of mirth’ and made it over. Like Mrs. Wharton, Mr. Chambers shows you the brightest and best touched with the poison; unlike Mrs. Wharton, he refuses to permit, much less to organize, a conspiracy of bitter circumstances which shall assist the poison in its cruel work and bring everything to a bitter end.” H. I. Brock.

“A particularly good story.”

“While the novel may be at heart no more pessimistic, socially speaking, than Mrs. Wharton’s ‘The House of mirth,’ it lacks the delicate perception and fine literary shading of that searching analysis.”

“If Mr. Chambers had only taken the time to reconstruct the volume, prune it of superfluous conversations, and infuse into it a little more of the heroism his title suggests, he would have had a novel of real significance.”

Chambers, Robert William.Iole. †$1.25. Appleton.

“This is the prettiest and gayest bit of satire that we have seen in print for many a day; daintily good-humored, but none the less piercing and effective.”

“The fun really ends with Iole’s marriage, at which point a wise reader, grateful for a smile, will move on to other pastures.” Mary Moss.

Chambers, Robert William.Mountain-land; with 8 full page il. in col. by Frank Richardson. **$1.50. Appleton.

Two little children have an instructive day’s journey to the mountain-land during which they converse with the mountains centuries old and learn the lesson of its disregard for time and change, and talk with the ice-fly, the snow jay, a band of owls, a squirrel, a lynx and giant silkworm moths. Each one of the creatures furnishes instruction regarding its identity, habitat and general characteristics.

Chambers, Robert William.Reckoning. †$1.50. Appleton.

“Mr. Chambers’s richly dressed puppets move briskly through their many trials to a happy end, and the author, as I before said, is a competent story teller.” Mary Moss.

“It leaves you with a sense of puzzled doubt just where erudition ceases and the dime novel begins.” Frederic Taber Cooper.

Chambers, Robert William.Tracer of lost persons. †$1.50. Appleton.

Certain interesting cases taken up by Mr. Keen, head of the firm of Keen & co., Tracers of lost persons, form the substance of these amusing stories, but they are not on the old detective story order, for they are all cases in which the lost person is a lost love or a lost ideal and they all end in happy marriages as the dinner given to Mr. Keen at the close of the volume by five radiant young couples testifies.

“Somewhat puerile and wholly absurd is the main idea of this amorous tale, but some of the incidents are amusing, and the dialogue is brisk.”

“A new and improved form of the detective story.”

“Capital reading for a leisure hour or two.”

Chamblin, Jean.Lady Bobs, her brother and I: a romance of the Azores. †$1.25. Putnam.

“The trick of pitching an unpretentious story in just the right key is rare enough to entitle Jean Chamblin’s placid little idyl of the Azores, ‘Lady Bobs, her brother and I’, to a word or two of cordial commendation.” Frederic Taber Cooper.

“She has a facile and humorous pen and her letters are literature.”

“It is a pity that Miss Chamblin has felt it necessary to resort to meaningless slang and cheap humor in order to enliven her heroine’s letters.”

“A large amount of interesting description and information regarding these unique islands is cleverly woven into the story.”

Champlain, Samuel de.Voyages and explorations of Samuel de Champlain(1604–1616) narrated by himself; tr. by Annie Nettleton Bourne, together with the voyage of 1603, reprinted from Purchas his pilgrimes; ed. with introd. and notes by Edward Gaylord Bourne. 2v. ea. **$1. Barnes.

“These volumes are a welcome addition to the ‘Trail makers’ series. They comprise the first English translation of Champlain’s ‘Voyages and explorations’ that has ever been made accessible to the general public. Thirty years ago translations were made for the Prince society, but they were published in an edition ‘strictly limited and now to be found only in the richer public and private collections of Americana.’ Professor and Mrs. Bourne have therefore rendered a distinct service to students of our early history. An extremely adequate and interesting introduction of twenty-eight pages has been contributed by Professor Bourne.”—Lit. D.

“An edition that represents in brief the sum of present-day knowledge.”

“A work of considerable interest to the historical student.”

Champlin, John Denison.Young folks’ cyclopedia of common things. $2.50. Holt.

This third edition revised and enlarged meets the demands of rapid advance during the past decade in everything pertaining to science and industrial arts.

Champlin, John Denison.Young folks’ cyclopaedia of persons and places. $2.50. Holt.

More than five hundred new articles appear in this fifth edition, including names of persons and places prominent in latter-day happenings.

“Will be welcomed by all boys and girls of alert, inquiring mind.”

Champney, Elizabeth Williams.Romance of the French abbeys. **$3. Putnam.

Chancellor, William Estabrook, and Hewes, Fletcher Willis.United States; a history of three centuries. 10 pts. pt. 2, Colonial union, 1698–1774. **$3.50. Putnam.

“It is unfortunate that so faulty a work should be launched upon the public by the reputation of a great publishing house and by strangely favorable notices from several literary periodicals of high standing.” W. M. West.

“His material is slight and it is further obscured by a flood of ‘literary’ allusions and historical philosophy-and-water in an inflated style which becomes a weariness to the reader’s patience.” Theodore Clarke Smith.

Channing, Edward.History of the United States. 8v. v. 1, Planting of a nation in the New World. **$2.50. Macmillan.

“Not only an admirable specimen of historical scholarship, but also a successful effort to present the results of scholarship in an attractive form.” Edward Gaylord Bourne.

“[His] sense of balanced judgment is reinforced by the shrewd, occasionally ironical or humorous style which reflects the personality of the author.” Theodore Clarke Smith.

“He still shows the mastery, the cool, skeptical scholarship, with the occasional gleam of wit and the constant clearness of expression which marked his first volume.”

Reviewed by Henry Russell Spencer.

Chapin, Henry Dwight.Vital questions. **$1. Crowell.

“The volume is a good one to put in the hands of one whose interest in matters social needs quickening.”

Charles, Frances Asa.Pardner of Blossom range. †$1.50. Little.

A tale of Arizona in which cowboys and Indians figure. Holly, the granddaughter of the owner of Blossom ranch conceives a dislike for an army captain who is alleged to be responsible for the death of a private whose horse Pardner comes into her possession. That this same officer should become a favorite in her train of suitors suggests an interesting situation which is satisfactorily worked out.

“The story is pretty, and the author has evidently made a resolute effort to soften the asperities of her early manner.”

Charlton, John.Speeches and addresses: political, literary, and religious. $2. Morang & co.

Chaucer, Geoffrey.Canterbury tales, prologue and selections: rewritten in simple language by Calvin Dill Wilson, and decorated by Ralph Fletcher Seymour. *$1. McClurg.

In retelling old tales for young readers, Mr. Wilson aims to preserve in his prose rendering the literary no less than the poetic and artistic qualities of the original. This Chaucer is a charming volume which is uniform with Mr. Wilson’s retold “Faery queen.”

Cheney, John Vance.Poems. **$1.50. Houghton.

Cheney, Warren.Challenge. †$1.50. Bobbs.

The dramatic incidents of Mr. Cheney’s tale serve to show in turn stout-hearted, superstitious and treacherous phases of character as exhibited among a group of Russians in the Alaskan bay of Ltua. The rebellious gurgling of the “draw”—a dangerous whirlpool at a certain turn of the tide—gets into the very action of the story, and as it sinks every mortal caught in its swirl except the brave-hearted Ivan and his Mortyra, typifies the evil of the tale. There is also a case of mental assassination worked out which introduces a metaphysical problem.

“There are some very strong situations and finely-drawn scenes in the work, which on the whole is far above the ordinary present-day story of this character.”

“It is a novel with a new idea, if there is such a thing in the world, and a new field, which is worth while in itself.”

“Warren Cheney ... knows his Alaska and the Russians there thoroughly. There is in this story a restrained dramatic intensity very grateful to the artistic sense.”

“There is decided value in the tale’s study of motive and character, together with a singularly full acquaintance with the local color and of a little-known historical episode.”

Chesnutt, Charles Waddell.Colonel’s dream.†$1.50. Doubleday.

“The narrative not unfrequently drags, and the character-drawing is sometimes wanting in clearness.”

Chesterton, Gilbert Keith.Charles Dickens. **$1.50. Dodd.

“This new book is builded on the false idea that just at this time Dickens needs a champion among his own people.” (N. Y. Times.) “Mr. Dickens and Mr. Chesterton move ... arm in arm through these pages like a pair of boon companions, and the ordinary reader may be trusted not to notice that Mr. Dickens’ arm is somewhat hard held.” (Sat. R.) “Dickens is a typical English figure, and it is on this side that Mr. Chesterton’s study is illuminating. It abounds in side-lights thrown by a somewhat mystical optimism and uproarious spirits on the Gargantuan feast of good humour provided by the master.” (Ath.)

“The style in which the book is written reminds us too closely of the smart political leader.”

“The real misfortune of the book is that the author seems unable to check his propensity for wild paradox, and cherishes a growing habit of exaggeration, which leads to false emphasis and essentially obscures the issue.”

“Mr. Chesterton’s book is one which no one who loves Dickens or who admires brilliant writing can afford to ignore.” Arthur Bartlett Maurice.

“As a life of Dickens it does not profess to have value. At the same time, it is entertaining, suggestive, brilliant in spots, the very last book one would go to sleep over. As a self-portrayal of Mr. Chesterton, rather than a picture of his greater countryman, it has decided merits.” Percy F. Bicknell.

“As biography Mr. Chesterton’s book is quite superfluous, and, we may add, quite inadequate. As criticism it will hugely delight folks who find enjoyment in literary fireworks.”

“With so good a book as Dr. Ward’s little critical biography in the field, the present volume seems a work of supererogation.”

“One cannot regard Mr. Chesterton as the ideal critic of Charles Dickens though he makes a very effective apologist.”

“The book, taken as a whole, is as warm and understanding a tribute as any hand has laid on the great writer’s grave. We find ourselves also largely in accordance with him when he blames and demurs.”

Chesterton, Gilbert Keith.Club of queer trades.†$1.25. Harper.

“They have not a free inventive stroke. They are whimsical and studied.”

Chesterton, Gilbert Keith.Heretics.*$1.50. Lane.

“As a critic, not only of heretics but of various aspects and relations of life discussed in this volume, when he has finished off the heretics, Mr. Chesterton shows a definite advance in clearness and force.”

Cheyne, Thomas Kelly.Bible problems and the new material for their solution. *$1.50. Putnam.

“The book is stimulating and thought-provoking, even though its theories are now and then insufficiently supported by facts.” Ira Maurice Price and John M. P. Smith.

Cholmondeley, Mary.Prisoners.†$1.50. Dodd.

“This novel is essentially a tragedy, with an Italian setting for the initial crime, that brings about the punishment of an innocent man through a woman’s revolting cowardice. The action of the novel centres about the redemption of the small-souled woman who emerges as a fairly honourable character.”—Canadian M.

“In no modern novel has the female mind been analyzed with a more delicate sense.”

“A powerful though somewhat painful book. Her one failure is Carstairs.”

“Faults it has in abundance—big, obtrusive, exasperating faults. It is a book well worth reading.” Edward Clark Marsh.

“Is as vivid in literary force as ‘Red pottage,’ and is more wholesome in tone. It is the work of an artist, not a vivisectionist.”

“The author makes herself the peer for a page or two with the writers of the best literature in the ... tribute to a certain class of dull, enduring Englishmen.”

“The story is not without dramatic chapters. In spite of literary defects it often holds the interest of the reader effectively.”

“Some of the deeper things in human nature are cleverly touched and their fountain sources stirred.”

“We find wisdom, indeed, rather in the stuff of the story than in those often brilliant incidental comments on which no small part of her fame reposes. We suggest that in this book, wise and witty as her ‘chorus’ often is, she has a little abused that privilege by trying ostentatiously to live up to it.”

“If the story, as said, mounts steadily, the reader, at least, is breathless much of the way under the suspense and under the cleverness. The ethical aspects are broad and deep.”

“In more ways than one, we are continually reminded of George Eliot; not that there is the faintest trace of imitation, but that Miss Cholmondeley has an equal insight into character and motive, a like power of analysis, a similar gift for pregnant sentences of humor and of wisdom.” M. Gordon Pryor Rice.

“This is not so well-rounded and satisfying a story as was ‘Red pottage.’”

“Is technically faulty in construction in that the critical point of the plot is reached in the early chapters, but the tenseness of the situation continues.”

“Brilliant but unequal novel.”

Christian, Eugene, and Christian, Mrs. Eugene (Mollie Griswold Christian).Uncooked foods and how to use them. $1. Health-Culture.

A new revised and enlarged edition of a treatise on how to get the highest form of animal energy from food. Food problems and the function of foods are discussed, and the use of uncooked foods is advocated from a stand-point of health, simplicity, and economy. Recipes for the preparationof uncooked foods with detailed menus of healthful combinations are given. The little book will prove valuable to those who feel that conventional modern cooking is not giving them the proper returns in health and strength.

Church: her communion and her service. 25c. General council pub. house.

Pastors of the Lutheran church, members, and those who desire to know the teachings of the Lutheran church will find in this booklet concise answers to questions concerning the church, her history and her doctrines.

Churchill, Winston.Coniston.†$1.50. Macmillan.

Love and politics are deftly blended in this life story of Jethro Bass, the New England politician of a generation ago, the crude man of the tannery who made himself a power in the state. His first victory, won by questionable methods, cost him the first Cynthy, but after a life in which his politics outweighed his love, great as that love was, he at last retires from the political field in a voluntary sacrifice of his power to the second Cynthia’s happiness. The book is full of strong characters; Bob, Cynthia’s lover, Bob’s father, old Ephraim, Ezra Graves. All Coniston seems to live upon its pages, with its local interests, its plots and counter plots; but the warm heart and the shrewd unscrupulous mind of Jethro, and the noble spirited girl who loved him while she despised his methods are the truly great things of the book.

“The novel, when tried on the touchstone of nature, does not stand the test. A genuine humour twinkles over the book, making it very pleasant indeed to read.”

“It is not too much to say that it places him at the head of contemporary American novelists.”

“It is of better quality than the average fiction of to-day.”

“A sober estimate will give the book due recognition for its idealism, its close observation, and its genuine human interest, while not ignoring its coherent structure, its superficial characterization, its long-windedness, its affected pose, and its slovenly diction.” Wm. M. Payne.

“Mr. Churchill’s latest novel is his best novel.”

“The story is open, nevertheless, to the same objections which have been brought against its predecessors—lack of concentration, and the diffusion of events over too large an area.”

“He transcribes rather than creates, and his effects are got by plodding equably ahead with his narrative rather than by any flash of inspiration.”

“‘Coniston’ would have been a good novel if it had begun in the middle.”

“‘Coniston’ can hardly fail to give its readers food for thought. Well will it be for our government if these readers are many, and if they straightway proceed to run according to the reading.”

“‘Coniston’ is so great an advance on ‘The crisis’ and ‘The crossing’ in construction, condensation, and artistic feeling that it cannot fail to appeal to a new group of readers, while its human duality will hold those who have already accepted Mr. Churchill as a born storyteller.”

“But Mr. Churchill does not merely preach a sermon on civic righteousness. ‘Coniston’ is a love story, and a capital one, of perhaps a deeper motive than any of the earlier romances from Mr. Churchill’s pen.”

Churchill, Winston.Title-mart. **75c. Macmillan.

In this little three-act comedy Mr. Churchill satirizes the American custom of bartering off comely heiresses in the title-market. The scene is laid in a millionaire’s New England “camp,” the principal actors are a practical father, an ambitious stepmother, an athletic daughter devoted to jiu-jitsu, and an English lord who for the amusement of the moment trades his title for the plain Reginald Burking, M. P. of the friend accompanying him. The situations growing out of the exchange of identity are humorously farcical.

“The whole, though a trifle extravagant, is written with remarkable spirit and humour.”

“It is smartly written and reads well. The contrast of the rustic mind with metropolitan swiftness is humorously set forth.”

“The play is extremely light, however, and depends for its substance upon a confusion in identities.”

Churchill, Winston Leonard Spencer.Lord Randolph Churchill.2v. **$9. Macmillan.

The fact that Mr. Winston Churchill is not of the party in the interests of which his father ran his brief political career insures for this work non-partisan treatment. It deals with Lord Churchill’s public rather than his private life, and is in the main a record of ten brief years of an effective career. During this period Lord Churchill became leader of the House of Commons and chief exponent of the so-called Tory democracy, attempted the reform of the Conservative party from within and in the end broke with all his former leaders and colleagues. “The atmosphere is from start to finish severely political.” (Acad.)

“Mr. Morley himself did not show more candour in writing the life of Mr. Gladstone than Mr. Winston Churchill has shown in dealing with the career of his father.”

“It will have to be carefully studied by all who would be well versed in the political history of England, especially party history, from the Reform act of 1867 to the end of the Unionist administration of 1886–1892.” Edward Porritt.

“In the work before us there are many fine passages, and we find it almost as a whole both vivid and dignified in narration, and here and there even noble.”

“Mr. Winston Churchill makes the reader feel the tragedy of his father’s life,—a tragedy equally dramatic whether, as he contends, it was due to a conscientious struggle for principles that could not be carried out, or whether,like the tragedies of romance, it was the fatal result of defects of character.” A. Lawrence Lowell.

“A biography of marked interest, of rare quality and of intrinsic historical value.” George Louis Beer.

“It has, then, both biographical importance and historical value, for it gives us a clearer insight into the workings of Tory machinery than any other volume.” E. D. Adams.

“Its place is alongside John Morley’s ‘Life of Gladstone.’”

“If executed with tact and a certain deference to family susceptibilities, may safely be pronounced an impressive political biography and an invaluable contribution to the history of the conservative party and of British politics generally.”

“A life so well worth writing has been admirably written.”

“His book has a general value in so far as it treats of the politics of Great Britain during a brief period active in partisan struggles if not notable for great achievements; for it gives us an inside view of the strange way in which a nation is governed.” Joseph O’Connor.

“Considering everything Mr. Churchill is to be felicitated on the zeal, tact, and ability with which he has executed his task.” H. Addington Bruce.

“His manifest care and wish—and he succeeds in both—are to present his father as he lived, fought, worked among his fellows.”

“The style of the narrative is easy and clear, occasionally graceful and pathetic. There is a due sense of perspective.”

“The book has its faults,—faults of arrangement, of prolixity and repetition, of occasional irrelevance; and the writer has been tempted unconsciously to turn the narrative of certain incidents in his father’s life into a kind of apology for certain incidents in his own. Mr. Churchill tells the story of his father’s private life with singular tact and good taste, and he has striven to make the tale of his public life an adequate history of an epoch in English politics.”

Clare, W. H.Rattle of his chains. $1.25 Eastern pub. co.

Here is portrayed on the one hand the bondage of a young man serving false gods bound so that with every move the chains rattle; on the other, the freedom of industry—“with greed, avarice and covetousness wanting, and with the golden rule as a living precept.”

Clarke, Rev. Richard F.Lourdes: its inhabitants, its pilgrims, and its miracles. *$1. Benziger.

The miracle phase of the Lourdes pilgrimage is uppermost in this account which is given with “rigorous exactitude.”

Clarke, William Newton.Use of the Scriptures in theology; the Nathaniel William Taylor lectures delivered at Yale university in 1905. **$1. Scribner.

“We believe the author’s positions and arguments are in the main sound and irrefutable.” Milton S. Terry.

“Mention should be made of the sweet spirit, religious insight, and frank and honest courage which appear conspicuously upon every page of the book.” G. B. S.

Clayden, Arthur William.Cloud studies.**$3.50. Dutton.

Not alone to the meteorologist and to the artist who finds extraordinary examples of art in the “general negligence of cloud forms,” but to the general reader also does this work appeal. “It is important to notice that the author accepts the types of the international cloud atlas and arranges his various forms as subforms of these types.” The illustrations include many reproductions of typical cloud-forms, and forms showing the transformation of one cloud-form into another.

“Not only the nature-lover and the artist, but the meteorologist as well, will find much of value and interest in this book.”

“While of great value to specialists, is hardly less interesting to the general reader, and will be immensely helpful in continued and more accurate study of this fascinating subject.”

“Mr. Claydon’s work will be a standard one for all students of clouds.” H. Hildebrand Hildebrandsson.

“While its text should appeal to the scientific man, and its photographic illustrations to the artist, the style is not attractive, and in spite of the theoretical interest of the subject, will hardly induce the wider public to read it in large numbers.”

“This volume is essentially practical, and anyone who has read it with attention will find a new interest added for the future to his daily study of the sky.”

Clemens, Samuel Langhorne (Mark Twain, pseud.).Editorial wild oats.†$1. Harper.

Clemens, Samuel Langhorne (Mark Twain, pseud.).Eve’s diary.$1. Harper.

“Translated from the original,” these experiences of Eve in the garden of Eden and afterwards form a fitting companion piece to “Extracts from Adam’s diary.” Thruout she is Eve, the first woman, naive, frankly curious and frankly loving, a world of women feel the kin-call when she speaks and her Adam, as she draws him, is without question the eternal masculine. There is a fund of wit and humor in this gentle satire on man and nature and there is something more, an undernote which culminates in this closing tribute to the first mother: At Eve’s grave. Adam: “Wheresoever she wastherewas Eden.”

“The book is hardly to us a favorable specimen of the author’s humour.”

“The only fault to find with these books is that there is so little of them.”

“The book bears internal evidence that it owes much to the skill of the translator.”

Clemens, Samuel Langhorne (Mark Twain, pseud.).Men and things. $1.25. Harper.

An illustrated volume of humor, comprising well chosen selections from thirty-six modern humorists including Ade, Aldrich, Bangs, Burdette, Field, Harris, Harte, Holmes, Howells, Nye, Warner and others perhaps less well known but no less amusing. Mark Twain, as compiler, opens the book with this apology, “Those selections in this book which are from my own works were made by my two assistant compilers, not by me. This is why there are not more.”

“It would seem that each author is represented by his inferior work only.”

“The new book is full of good matter, in prose and verse.”

“It is trite and unnecessary but only fair to say that the best things in the book are his own.”

Clemens, Samuel Langhorne (Mark Twain, pseud.), ed. Primrose way. Mark Twain’s library of humor. †$1.50. Harper.

The third volume in Mark Twain’s “Library of humor” continues for funloving readers the humorous offerings of “Men and things,” and “Women and things.” Besides the editor’s own contributions are stories by George Ade, John Kendrick Bangs, Samuel Cox, Sewell Ford, William Dean Howells, John G. Saxe, Melville D. Landon, Hugh Pendexter and many others.

Clemens, Samuel Langhorne (Mark Twain, pseud.).$30,000 bequest and other stories.$1.75. Harper.

Forty or more of Mark Twain’s funniest stories have been gathered into this volume. Some have appeared before in book form while other more recent ones have seen print only in magazines. The volume includes: A dog’s tale, The Californian’s tale, A telephone conversation, Italian with grammar, The danger of lying in bed, Eve’s diary, Extracts from Adam’s diary, and A double-barreled detective story. The frontispiece is a photograph of the author on his 70th birthday, and there are other illustrations.

Clemens, Samuel Langhorne (Mark Twain, pseud.).Women and things. †$1.50. Harper.

The second volume in Mark Twain’s “Library of humor.” There are some of Mark Twain’s own stories including the inimitable funny “Esquimau maiden’s romance.” There are stories by George Ade, John Kendrick Bangs, Josh Billings, Josiah Allen’s Wife, Widow Bedott, Bret Harte and others. The stories humorously show the graces, the foibles, the fancies and weaknesses of women.

Clement, Ernest Wilson.Christianity in modern Japan. **$1. Am. Bapt.

“Clear, compact, and well arranged.”

Clement, Ernest Wilson.Handbook of modern Japan. **$1.40. McClurg.

Clements, Frederick E.Research methods in ecology. $3. Univ. pub., Neb.

“One can scarcely praise this work too much; it is what is needed to prevent ecology from falling into a swift and merited disfavor.”

Clerke, Agnes Mary.System of the stars. *$6.50. Macmillan.

The results of the past fifteen years of sidereal research have been embodied in Miss Clerke’s revision. Extensive modifications of the old text have been made, and new chapters inserted.

“It has the remarkable feature of combining extraordinary profusion of precise information with an elegance of literary style quite unusual in scientific authors.”

“All astronomers and those interested in astronomy will heartily welcome the new edition of Miss Clerke’s ‘System of the stars’.”

“Students of astronomy will find the latest results of sidereal research admirably stated in the new edition.”

“The work is so good that every student of astronomical physics must be familiar with it, and every astronomical library must include it.” R. A. Gregory.

“Is one of the noteworthy additions to scientific literature.”

“We find, as we expected to find, a well-arranged, lucid and remarkably accurate account of an immense number of observations and a sympathetic though judicious and cautious analysis of the various inferences that have been drawn from them.”

“Miss Clerke. with her usual power of accurate and lucid exposition, has given us a most fascinating account of all that astronomers have thus far discovered about these immensely distant stars.”

Cleveland, Frederick Albert.Bank and the treasury. *$1.80. Longmans.

Reviewed by Frank L. McVey.

“In character it is a plea, not an investigation; an exposition and defense of ‘a point of view.’ The author also makes some excellent proposals concerning the form of bank reports.” David Kinley.

Cleveland, (Stephen) Grover.Fishing and shooting sketches: il. by H: S. Watson. *$1.25. Outing pub.

Mr. Grover Cleveland is manifestly as authoritative on the subject of fishing as was Isaak Walton of old. Much of the former’s philosophyis simmered down to creed form for the sportsman. And his book, copyrighted now for the fifth time, has become a guide book for the fisherman and hunter who are only better instructed for the woodsy out-of-door tang to all of Mr. Cleveland’s law unto their “honorable order.”

Climenson, Mrs. Emily J.Elizabeth Montagu, the Queen of the Blue-stockings: her correspondence from 1720–1761. 2v. **$8. Dutton.

The story of the early life of Mrs. Montagu, written by her great-great-niece. “The material in the two volumes was gleaned from some sixty-eight cases, in each of which were from 100 to 150 letters, written by Mrs. Montagu or received by her. There are letters to and from the most learned and celebrated personages in England and France and other countries. Among the names mentioned are the Duchess of Portland, Laurence Sterne, Dr. Johnson, Sir Robert Walpole, Mrs. Friend, Elizabeth Carter, the translator of Epictetus; Gilbert West, Nathaniel Hooke, Mrs. Pococke, David Hume, Lyttleton, Lord Bath, Dr. Young, and a number of others.” (N. Y. Times.)

“Mrs. Climenson has succeeded in identifying, with one or two exceptions, the numerous folk whose names occur in her text; in other respects her notes are defective and capricious.”

“Though containing a variety of readable matter, we think it might with advantage have been shortened by the excision of much domestic detail which is not of general interest.”

Reviewed by J. H. Lobban.

“Mrs. Climenson has proved herself a loving editor of her kinswoman’s letters. She has verified with enormous labor the dates of letters, many of which were previously uncertain.” Basil Williams.

“She was a formalist rather than a wit, and in her letters she tries so hard to be amusing that one would really prefer her natural dulness.”

[Mrs. Climenson has] “so more than edited it that the two handsome and liberally illustrated volumes ... might be styled a memoir.”

“The two volumes before us are edited with some care and not a little profusion.”

“Her correspondence is interesting, for it gives an insight into the customs of the day, fashions, amusements, travel, etc.”

“We have many reliable and entertaining contemporary records of the crowded eighteenth century, but this must be regarded as exceptionally attractive.” Elizabeth Lore North.

“Mrs. Climenson is defective in ... literary tact and sense of perspective.”

Clute, Willard Nelson.Fern allies. **$2. Stokes.

“The field notes, which show an intimate acquaintance with the life histories of the various forms, will interest the botanist as well as the layman.”

“One could hardly ask a better guide than Mr. Clute’s handsome volume.”

“A few years ago the Clutes gave us the best, most comprehensive book that we have concerning our ferns in their haunts, and now they have accomplished a yet more difficult task, that of writing and adequately illustrating a guide to the more obscure kin of the fern tribe.” Mabel Osgood Wright.

Coates, Thomas F. G.Prophet of the poor: the life story of General Booth. *$1.50. Dutton.

“In its special mission of reclaiming and preventing the waste of humanity, the Salvation army has put life and force into the desiccated idea of the ‘Church militant.’ Of this idea, as well as of the poor, General Booth has been for over half a century the prophet, and also the prophet of a human brotherhood, the Christian ideal of which is more largely realized in his army than in any other branch of the church. The life-story of this great leader, and of his like-minded and noble wife and comrade, the ‘mother’ of the army, is an illustrious chapter in the yet unfinished Acts of the apostles.”—Outlook.

“One would turn to it in vain to find broad grasp of the relation of the Army to other religious or social efforts of the time, or even vivid portrayal of the personality of its subject. It fails also in arrangement of its material, has no index, and is not in any way satisfactory as a biography of General Booth.”

“A very entertaining and graphic biography.”

Cody, Sherwin.Success in letter-writing, business and social. **75c. McClurg.

The methods of the old-fashioned polite letter-writing have been studiously avoided in this up to date volume which “actually tells how to deal with human nature by mail.” Under the head of business letter writing not only routine business letters, but circular letters, advertising letters and letters which “sell goods” are treated. Under social letter writing are included the various forms of social correspondence, invitations, regrets, letters of friendship and liberal advice upon love letters.

Colcock, Annie T.Her American daughter. $1.50. Neale.

A group of American writers and artists come together in Madrid at the opening of the Spanish-American war, and during these agitated days they work out among themselves the very pretty little love story of Miss Ray, an art student from South Carolina and Russell, a New York writer who has had the misfortune to offend her by publishing an article which ridicules the South. A bull-fight, a carnival, a wicked señor who has made a wager that Miss Ray will dine with him at midnight unchaperoned, and good Donna Dolores who calls Miss Ray her American daughter, lend to the story a truly Spanish atmosphere.


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