CHATTO & WIND US, PICCADILLY. 29 THE PICCADILLY NOVELS continued. Her Mother's Darting. By Mrs j H> RlDDELL The Way we Live A/OW. By ANTHONY TROLLOPE. With Illustrations. The American Senator. By ANTHONY TROLLOPE. " Mr, Trollope has a true artist's idea of tone^ of colour^ of harmony : his pictures are one^ and seldom out of drawing; he never strains aftereffect's fidelity itself in expressing English life> is never guilty of caricature." FORTNIGHTLY REVIEW. Diamond Cut Diamond. By T. A. TROLLOPE.
- ' Full of life, of interest, of close observation, and sympathy. . . . When
Mr. Trollope paints a scene it is sure to be a scene worth painting" SATUR- DAY REVIEW. Bound to the Wheel. By JOHN SAUNDERS. Guy Waterman. By JOHN SAUNDERS. One Against the World. By JOHN SAUNDERS. The Lion in the Path. By JOHN SAUNDERS. "A carefully written and beautiful story a story of goodness and truth, which is yet as interesting as though it dealt -with the opposite qualities. . . . The author of this really clever story has been at great pains to work out all its details -with elaborate conscientiousness, and the result is a very vivid picture of the ways of life and habits of thought of a hundred and fifty years ago. . . . Certainly a very interesting book." TIMES. Ready-Money Mortiboy. By W. BESANT and JAMES RICE. My Little Girl. By W. BESANT and JAMES RICE. The Case of Mr. Lucraft. By W. BESANT and JAMES RICE. This Son of Vulcan. By W. BESANT and JAMES RICE. With Harp and Crown. By W. BESANT and JAMES RICE. The Golden Butterfly. By W. BESANT and JAMES RICE. With a Frontispiece by F. S. WALKER. " ' The Golden Butterfly ' will certainly add to the haziness of mankind, for defy anvbody to read it with a glonmv countenance." TIMES. NEW NOVEL BY JUSTIN MCCARTHY. Two vols. 8vo, cloth extra, Illustrated, 2U., the THIRD EDITION of Miss Misanthrope. By JUSTIN MCCARTHY, Author of "Dear Lady Disdain," &c. With 12 Illustrations by ARTHUR HOPKINS. " In ' Miss Misanthrope' Mr. McCarthy has addeda new and delightful portrait tn his gallery of Englishwomen. . . . It is a novel which may be sipped like choice wine ; it is one to linger over and ponder ; to be enjoyed like fine, sweet air, or pond company, for it is pervaded by a perfume of honesty and humour, of high feeling, of kindly penetrating humour, of good sense, and wide knowledge of the world, of a mind richly cultivated and amply stored. There is scarcely a page in these volumes in which we do not find some fine remark or felicitous reflection of piercing, yet gentle and indulgent irony." DAILY NEWS.