OUR NEW WAY ROUND THE WORLD; OR, WHERE TO GO AND WHAT TO SEE. By Charles Carleton Coffin. Containing several full-page Maps, showing steamship lines and routes of travel, and profusely illustrated with more than 100 engravings, reproduced from photographs and original sketches. Crown octavo. Morocco Cloth, $3.00; Half Calf, $5.50; Library Edition, $3.50. "In Mr. Charles C.Coffin we have a traveller after the latest and best transatlantic pattern. He has thrown himself thoroughly into the spirit of his age and race; yet, while loyal to the backbone, and indorsing to the full his country's claims to present grandeur and future pre-eminence, he has a corner in his soul for the merits of other lands, and is open to the lessons of Old-World wisdom. Rapid as was his flight, and superficial as was his purview of the multitudinous objects that daily crowded his path, his powers of observation are, we are bound to say, keen and vigorous, and his judgments upon men and things both shrewd and impartial. Be it the aspects of nature, "The author of this interesting and valuable tour of the globe starts from New York, visits every city of note in Europe, sails from Marseilles to Alexandria, thence to Cairo, and Suez Canal, India, China, and Japan, returning by the way of California. Through this wide field for observation and research, his keen habits of characterization, and his vivid powers of description make him an exceedingly agreeable travelling companion. Mr. Coffin has the very happy faculty of giving to a really thrice-told tale of travel a freshness that carries the reader to the end of the volume with unabated interest. His tour in the interior of the British possessions in India is full of interest,—and his elaborate pictures of China at the present time are valuable, showing the actual character of the people; the tenacity of their prejudices, which appear to resist all innovation from 'outside barbarians,' is most graphically depicted, and is worthy the attention of our politicians and speculative philanthropists. The book on the whole is a valuable addition to our native literature, written as it is from a distinctive American stand-point view of foreign nations. Numerous spirited designs, illustrative of habits and manners, adorn the work, together with maps in abundance."—N.Y. Express. "A model record of travel, over fields comparatively unknown. It combines, in a remarkable degree, skill and judgment in the selection of facts and points, with clearness, accuracy, and proportion in their statement: a natural ease and grace of expression, with a genial spirit, and a broad, true sympathy with everything human. A very large amount of instructive and attractive matter is compressed in its pages. The illustrations, too, are numerous, and all in admirable keeping with the narrative. In these, and in the clear, fair, readable type, the publishers have well done their part. "We confess to a deeper, and consciously healthier interest in the perusal than in the reading of any similar volume. Very heartily, therefore, do we commend the book to the winter-evening family circle, sure that it will instruct and charm alike both young and old."—N.Y. Christian World. "The book has many excellent illustrations, and is written with all the loveliness and instructiveness for which 'Carleton' became famous during the war, as a war correspondent of the Boston Journal. The book is gossipy and entertaining in a high degree, and will interest young and old."—New York Evening Post. *** For sale by all booksellers, or sent, post-paid, to any address, by the Publishers, FIELDS, OSGOOD, & CO., 124 Tremont Street, Boston. FOUR YEARS OF FIGHTING. A volume of Personal Observation with the Army and Navy, from the first Battle of Bull Run to the Fall of Richmond. 1 vol. 8vo. With Steel Portrait of the Author, and numerous Illustrations. Cloth, $3.50; Sheep, $4.50. From Senator Yates, of Illinois. ...From the accuracy with which you relate those incidents which fell under my personal observation, I am persuaded that the whole volume forms a very valuable addition to the historic literature of the heroic age of the Republic. I am, sir, your obliged friend, RICH'D YATES. *** For sale by all Booksellers. Sent, post-paid, on receipt of price by the Publishers, FIELDS, OSGOOD, & CO., Boston. MY DAYS AND NIGHTS ON THE BATTLE-FIELD. A Book for Boys. By "Carleton." 1 vol. 16mo. Illustrated. $1.50. "It is written by one of the best of the war correspondents, 'Carleton,' of the Boston Journal, whose opportunities for observing all the celebrated battles of the war were unsurpassed. The book is really a history of the first year of the war, and describes the principal battles of that period,—Bull Run, Fort Henry, Fort Donelson, Pittsburg Landing, Columbus, New Madrid, Island No. 10, and Memphis, in part of which the writer was, and all of which he saw."—Buffalo Express. *** For sale by all Booksellers. Sent, post-paid, on receipt of price by the Publishers, FIELDS, OSGOOD, & CO., Boston. FOLLOWING THE FLAG. From August, 1861, to November, 1862, with the Army of the Potomac. By "Carleton." 1vol.16mo. Illustrated. $1.50. " *** For sale by all Booksellers. Sent, post-paid, on receipt of price by the Publishers. FIELDS, OSGOOD, & CO., Boston. WINNING HIS WAY. BY "CARLETON." 1 vol. 16mo. Illustrated. $1.25. Clement, Clinton Co., Illinois. Mr. Carleton. Dear Sir,—Is "Winning His Way" a true story? Is the story published in book form? Where does Paul live? I am very much interested in the story, but my father thinks it is all fiction as he calls it. If you will answer this you will oblige a boy ten years old, who has read it four times, and who means to read it again when I go over to Aunt Leach's. Paul's ardent admirer, JOHN W. SCOTT. April 16, 1870. Boston, May 7, 1870. John W. Scott. My Dear Young Friend,—I am very much gratified to hear that you are so much interested in "Winning His Way," which has been published in book form by Messrs. Fields, Osgood, & Co. You ask if it is a true story. I will tell you about it: I knew a brave boy who went into the army and fought just as Paul fought, who was left on the field for dead, and who was taken to a rebel prison, and I had him in mind all the time I was writing the story. That is all true about painting the pigs, and shutting the school-house door, and tying the hay in front of the old horse's nose. So you can tell your father that the things did not happen just in the order they are given in the book, but that I tried to make the story true to life. Your friend, CARLETON. "A story of a poor Western boy who, with true American grit in his composition, worked his way into a position of honorable independence, and who was among the first to rally round the flag when the day of his country's peril came. There is a sound, manly tone about the book, a freedom from nam-by-pambyism, worthy of all commendation."—Sunday School Times. "One of the best of stories for boys."—Hartford Courant. *** For sale by all Booksellers. Sent, post-paid, on receipt of price by the Publishers, FIELDS, OSGOOD, & CO., Boston. |