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THE STICKIT MINISTER AND SOME COMMON MEN

by

S. R. CROCKETT

6s. (Illustrated), 1s, net (Cloth), 6d. (Paper Covers).

"iere is one of the books which are at present coming slngly and at long intervals, like early swallows, to herald, it is to be hoped, a larger Right When the larger Night appears, the winter of our discontent will have passed, and we shall be able to boast that the short story can make a home east as well as west of the Atlantic. There is plenty of human nature of the Scottish variety, which is a very good variety-a The Stickit Minister and its com panion stories: plenty of humour, too, of that dry, pawky kind which is a monopoly of Caledonia, stern and wild'; and, most plentiful of all, a quiet perception and reticent renderlng of that underlying pathos of life which is to be discovered, not in Scotland alone, but everywhere that a man is found who can see with the heart and the inagination as well as the brain. Mr. Crockett has given us a book that is not merely good. It is what his countrymen would call by-ordinary good,' which, being interpreted Into a tongue understanded of the southern herd, means that it is excellent, with a somewhat exceptional kind of excellence."-Daily Chronicle.

THE LILAC SUN-BONNET

by

S. R. CROCKETT

Sixth Edition. Crown 8vo.doth, 6s.

"Mr. Crockett's 'Lilac Sun-Bonnet 'needs no bush.' Here is a pretty love tale, and the landscape and rural descriptions carry the exile back into the Kingdom of Galloway. Here, indeed, is the scent of bog-myrtle and peat After inquiries among the fair. I learn that of all romances, they best love, not 'sociology, not theology,' still less, open manslaughter, for a motive, but just love's young dream, chapter after chapter. From Mr. Crockett they get what they want, 'hot with,' as Thackeray admits that he liked it."

Mr. ANDREW LANG in Longman's Magazine