ABOUT AN OLD NEW ENGLAND CHURCH. $1.00. “I have read it twice and enjoyed it the second time even more than the first.”—Oliver Wendell Holmes. “I read the preface, and that one little bite out of the crust made me as hungry as a man on a railroad. What a bright evening full of laughter, touched every now and then with tenderness, it made for us I do not know how to tell. Here is a book I am glad to indorse as I would a note—right across the face and present it for payment in any man’s library.”—Robert J. Burdette. THE CHILD AND THE BOOK. $.75. (G. P. Putnam’s Sons.) “I must express with your connivance the joy I have had, the enthusiasm I have felt, in gloating over every page of what I believe is the most brilliant book of any season since Carlyle’s and Emerson’s pens were laid aside. It is full of humor, rich in style, and eccentric in form, and all suffused with the perfervid genius of a man who is not merely a thinker but a force. Every sentence is tinglingly alive…. “I have been reading with wonder and laughter and with loud cheers. It is the word of all words that needed to be spoken just now. It makes me believe that after all we haven’t a great kindergarten about us in authorship, but that there is virtue, race, sap in us yet. I can conceive that the date of the publication of this book may well be the date of the moral and intellectual renaissance for which we have long been scanning the horizon.”—Wm. Sloane Kennedy, in Boston Transcript. THE LOST ART OF READING. $1.00. (G. P. Putnam’s Sons.) “It is a real pleasure to chronicle an intellectual treat among the books of the day. Some of us will shrug at this volume. Others of us having read it will keep it near us.”—Life. “Mr. Lee is a writer of great courage, who ventures to say what some people are a little alarmed even to think.”—Springfield Republican. “You get right in between the covers and live.”—Denver Post. THE SHADOW CHRIST. $1.25. (The Century Co.) “Let me be one of the first to recognize in this book what every man who reads it thoughtfully will feel. Heaps of the books that have been written about the Bible are desiccated to the last grain of their dust. They are the desert which lies around Palestine. Now and then a man appears who makes his way straight into the Promised Land, by sea if necessary, and takes you with him. It is not meant to be a full, precise treatment of the subject. It is history seen in a vision. Theology expressed in a lyric. Criticism condensed into an epigram.”—Dr. Henry van Dyke, in The Book Buyer. “The author’s name—Gerald Stanley Lee—has been hitherto unknown to us in England, but the book he has here offered to the world indicates that he has that in him which will soon make it familiar.”—The Christian World (London). MOUNT TOM. An all outdoors magazine, devoted to rest and worship, and to a little look-off on the world. Edited by Mr. Lee. Every other month. 12 copies, $1.00. THE VOICE OF THE MACHINES. $1.25. (Mt. Tom Press.) Any of the above mailed postpaid ordered direct from |