Brenda's Summer at Rockley/End matter
Brenda, Her School
and Her Club
By HELEN LEAH REED
Author of “Brenda’s Summer at Rockley,” “Miss Theodora,” etc.
Illustrated by Jessie Willcox Smith. 10mo. Decorated Cloth. $1.50
Miss Reed’s girls have all the impulses and likes of real girls as their characters are developing, and her record of their thoughts and actions reads like a chapter snatched from the page of life. It is bright, genial, merry, wholesome, and full of good characterizations.—Boston Herald.
Equal to the best of the recent books of school life about boys. Lively and amusing, revealing a shrewd understanding of girl nature, and containing considerable Boston local history.—The Congregationalist.
Unless we greatly err, this is a story which the girl of the times who is fortunate enough to read it will pronounce “perfectly fine.”—Brooklyn Times.
The descriptions in the book are thoroughly well done. Miss Reed seems to have discovered a new field.—Boston Budget.
A very natural story of a group of school-girls.—Outlook New York.
The book is a thoroughly entertaining one, and contains a vivid and inspiring description of a Harvard football game. . . . The illustrations by Jessie Willcox Smith are extremely good.New Orleans Picayune.
A wholesome book of schoolgirl life. . . . It is an interesting and instructive book, the sort that ought to be in Sunday-school libraries.—Church Militant, Boston.
The author knows how to “hold the mirror up to nature,” and does so with telling result.—The Watchman.
Little, Brown, & Company, Publishers
254 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
Anna Chapin Ray’s
SUCCESSFUL
“Teddy” Stories
TEDDY: HER BOOK. A Story of Sweet Sixteen, Illustrated by Vesper L. George. 12mo. Decorated Cloth. $1.50.
PHEBE: HER PROFESSION. Illustrated by F. T. Merrill, 12mo. Decorated Cloth. $1.50.
TEDDY: HER DAUGHTER. Illustrated by J. B. Graff, 12mo. Decorated Cloth. $1.20 net. {Just Ready.)
From “THE CHRISTIAN REGISTER”
PHEBE: HER PROFESSION. By Anna Chapin Ray.
Miss Ray’s work draws instant comparison with the best of Miss Alcott’s; first, because she has the same genuine sympathy with boy and girl life; secondly, because she creates real characters, individual and natural, like the young people one knows, actually working out the same kind of problems; and, finally, because her style of writing is equally unaffected and straightforward.
She builds upon clearly thought-out convictions, and the influence of the book will be wholly for good, tending toward a sane, wholesome view of life generally. There is a deal of fun in it too. In short, this is one of the few books written for young people into the making of which has gone a vigor and grace such as one asks for in a good story for older people.