A MIDDY’S RECOLLECTIONS 1853 TO 1860 By Rear-Admiral the Hon. V. A. MONTAGU Illustrated with two Photogravures and six Half-tone Blocks. Square Crown 8vo., Cloth. Price 6s. England was at war during practically the whole brief period covered by this narrative. The Middy had part in not a few of the engagements, which, helped by illustrations, he describes vividly. The work is of historical importance as showing the state of the English Navy in an epoch which is now closed. A PRISONER OF FRANCE THE MEMOIRS, DIARY, AND Containing Frontispiece Portrait of Captain Boothby. Square Crown 8vo., Cloth. Price 6s. This narrative begins with the Battle of Talavera, at which the chronicler, a young officer in the Royal Engineers, was disabled by a wound in the leg. It vividly describes the social conditions of France and Spain during the wars in the early part of the century, and in particular the chivalrous courtesy with which the French officers treated any enemies who fell into their hands. Fcap. 8vo. Cloth, 280 pages. Price 2s. 6d. CAIRO OF TO-DAY A PRACTICAL GUIDE TO CAIRO AND ITS ENVIRONS By E. A. REYNOLDS-BALL AUTHOR OF “MEDITERRANEAN HEALTH RESORTS,” ETC. Illustrated with specially prepared Maps and Plans of Cairo, its “An admirable, concise, and eminently practical guide. The book should score an immediate success.”—Cook’s Excursionist. “The book is throughout written with a peculiar knowledge of the needs of passing visitors in Cairo.”—Scotsman. “A handy and dependable guide-book.”—Daily Mail. “Any one intending to visit Cairo for health or pleasure will find all that he is likely to require between the two covers. A couple of maps and a plan of Cairo will be found particularly useful for rambles either through or around the city.”—Glasgow Herald. “It would be hard to find a fault with this little volume.”—New York Herald (Paris.) Crown 8vo, Cloth, 680 pages. Price 15s. O’SHEA’S GUIDE TO SPAIN THE ELEVENTH EDITION, COMPLETELY REVISED By JOHN LOMAS who has just returned from the Peninsula. Illustrated with new Maps, Plans, etc. Fcap, 8vo, Cloth, 200 pages. Price 2s 6d. A GUIDE TO CONSTANTINOPLE By DEMETRIUS COUFOPOULOS Illustrated with specially prepared Plans of Constantinople and Pera, also a Chart of the Bosphorus “A personal knowledge of the Turkish capital enables us to appreciate the accuracy of the description of the city and its environs, and the very useful information with which its pages are filled. Those who intend visiting Turkey will find the guide indispensable.”—The Sphinx. “The author evidently knows the city well ... the handy volume is likely to prove really serviceable to the majority of visitors, ... the plans by Bartholomew are excellent.”—Times. “The book is well supplied with maps and plans, and is on the whole just such a book as one would wish to have who had a week or so to spend in seeing the capital of the Ottoman Empire.”—Scotsman. HANDBOOK TO By H. M. and M. A. R. T. Part I.—THE CHRISTIAN MONUMENTS OF ROME, Price 7s. 6d. Part II.—THE LITURGY IN ROME, Price 5s. Now Ready, to be followed by MONASTICISM, AND ECCLESIASTICAL ROME This Handbook gives full information on the Catacombs, Basilicas, Church Ceremonies, the Hierarchy, and the Papal Household, and so meets a need felt by English and American travellers. No such guide to Christian Rome has previously existed. It is in a portable form, and illustrated with plans and other cuts. “The compilation of this work is an important event for English visitors in Rome. Information about the Christian side of the City, about its churches, ceremonies, and customs, is just what is difficult to procure accurately and fully. No existing guide-book covers half what they (the authors) have done.”—Bookman. “This should be a most valuable book to tourists abroad. The information given is well arranged and clearly put.”—Academy. “If you want to know anything about anybody, get a copy of AN ANNUAL BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY Price 3s. 6d. net. WHO’S WHO EDITED BY DOUGLAS SLADEN Contains nearly 8000 Biographies—Mostly Autobiographies—of Excerpt from The Times’ Notice of 25th March 1897 In spite of the number and variety of the works of reference published annually nowadays, there is always room for a new one if it really fills a place hitherto vacant, and brings together useful information in a handy and acceptable form. Judged by such a test, the new issue of “Who’s Who,” of which the first yearly volume has just appeared under the editorship of Mr. Douglas Sladen, ought certainly to count upon a warm welcome. This work has up to the present, since its birth in 1848, “that year of strife and kingdoms over-set,” been content to serve as a hand-book to the titled and official classes only. Its aim is now “to include all the most prominent people in the kingdom, whether their prominence is inherited, or depending upon office, or the result of ability which singles them out from their fellows in occupations open to every educated man and woman.” The field of its operations is thus very wide, and it is greatly to the credit of Mr. Sladen that it has been covered so well already. In Crown 8vo, over 800 pages, bound in Cloth Gilt, with Price 3s. 6d. net. London: A. & C. BLACK, Soho Square |