Modern Library of the World's Best Books — ^— ^^M^^— ^» I I ■■■■!■! I ■ ..!!■! —— — «■— —^— ^^ Many distinguished American and foreign authors have said that the Modern Library is one of the most stimu- lating factors in American intellectual life. Practically everybody who knows anything about good books owns a number of copies and generally promises himself to own them all. . . . One of the largest book stores in the country reports that more copies of the Modern Library are purchased for gifts than any other books now being issued. The sweep of world events has, of course, been a con- tributing influence to our success. Purposeful reading is taking the place of miscellaneous dabbling in litera- ture, and the Modern Library is being daily recom- mended by notable educators as a representative library of modern thought. Many of our titles are being placed on college lists for supplementary reading and they are being continuously purchased by the American Library Association for Government camps and schools. The list of titles on the following six pages (together with the list of introductions written especially for the Modern Library), indicates that our use of the term " Modern " does not necessarily mean written within the last few years. Voltaire is certainly a modern of mod- erns, as are Samuel Butler, Francois Villon, Theophile Gautier and Dostoyevsky. Many of the books in the Modern Library are not re- prints, but are new books which cannot be found in any other edition. None of them can be had in any such convenient and attractive form. It would be difficult to find any other editions of any of these books at double the price. They can be purchased Wherever books are sold or you can get them from the publishers. BONI AND LIVERIGHT
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