THIRD EDITIONTHE RED HORIZONBy PATRICK MacGILL, Author of "Children of the Dead End," "The Rat-Pit," "The Amateur Army," etc. Crown 8vo. Price 5/- net. Inland Postage 5d. extra.FIRST REVIEWSPall Mall Gazette."Vivid work."Sunday Times."... as this. Alive from cover to cover."Daily Mail."A very remarkable book ... a series of wonderful word pictures."Evening Standard."This book, sincere and enthralling, has a place of its own in the literature of the war."Country Life."The Red Horizonis sure to be as widely read as the most vivid description yet written of the actualities of this war."Globe."The Red Horizonshould be read in conjunction with 'The First Hundred Thousand.' Each is a pendant to the other. Mr. MacGill's book is one of the few volumes on the war which one can cordially recommend."Daily News."His book is a book of real things. It will also be eagerly read as a book of adventures, for, in his experiences with the London Irish, Mr. MacGill found adventures at every step. Its mixture of excitement, amusement, and gross reality is likely to make it one of the most popular books about the war."Saturday Review."Bill the Cockney is a breathing character that Dickens would have loved; and now that he has put fun into this book he cannot be slain until the book dies. All the other characters are alive, but Bill lives with a vigour that cannot come from his narrow, street-bred chest. He is the genius of Cockneyism."HERBERT JENKINS LD., 12Arundel Place, London, S.W.
THIRD EDITION
THE RED HORIZON
By PATRICK MacGILL, Author of "Children of the Dead End," "The Rat-Pit," "The Amateur Army," etc. Crown 8vo. Price 5/- net. Inland Postage 5d. extra.
FIRST REVIEWS
Pall Mall Gazette."Vivid work."
Sunday Times."... as this. Alive from cover to cover."
Daily Mail."A very remarkable book ... a series of wonderful word pictures."
Evening Standard."This book, sincere and enthralling, has a place of its own in the literature of the war."
Country Life."The Red Horizonis sure to be as widely read as the most vivid description yet written of the actualities of this war."
Globe."The Red Horizonshould be read in conjunction with 'The First Hundred Thousand.' Each is a pendant to the other. Mr. MacGill's book is one of the few volumes on the war which one can cordially recommend."
Daily News."His book is a book of real things. It will also be eagerly read as a book of adventures, for, in his experiences with the London Irish, Mr. MacGill found adventures at every step. Its mixture of excitement, amusement, and gross reality is likely to make it one of the most popular books about the war."
Saturday Review."Bill the Cockney is a breathing character that Dickens would have loved; and now that he has put fun into this book he cannot be slain until the book dies. All the other characters are alive, but Bill lives with a vigour that cannot come from his narrow, street-bred chest. He is the genius of Cockneyism."
HERBERT JENKINS LD., 12Arundel Place, London, S.W.