BY SIMEON STRUNSKY PROFESSOR LATIMER'S PROGRESS

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The "sentimental journey" of a middle-aged American scholar upon whose soul the war has come down heavily, and who seeks a cure—and an answer—in a walking trip up-State.

"The war has produced no other book like 'Professor Latimer's Progress,' with its sanative masculine blend of deep feeling, fluid intelligence, and heart-easing mirth, its people a joyous company. It is a spiritual adventure, the adventure of the American soul in search of a new foothold in a tottering world. We have so many books of documents, of animus, or argument; what a refreshment to fall in, for once in a way, with a book of that quiet creative humor whose 'other name' is wisdom."—The Nation.

LITTLE JOURNEYS TOWARDS PARIS (1914-1918)

By W. Hohenzollern, translated and adapted for unteutored minds by Simeon Strunsky.

"If only the Germans could be supplied with translations of this exquisite satire they would die laughing at the grisly joke on themselves. Not only funny, it is a final reductio ad absurdum of the Hun philosophy."—Chicago Tribune.

BELSHAZZAR COURT

Or Village Life in New York City

Graceful essays about the average citizen in his apartment house, in the street, at the theater, the baseball park, with his children, etc.


                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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