Jump to content

The Isle of Seven Moons/End matter

From Wikisource
3095137The Isle of Seven Moons — AdvertisementsRobert Gordon Anderson

Other Books by

Robert Gordon Anderson


The Little Chap

Frontispiece in Color
"He might have made it sentimental, but he has told it with such simplicity and restraint that he has made it a work of art."—Philadelphia Ledger.


Not Taps but Reveille

"Mr. Anderson has enriched the enduring literature of our race with noble thoughts expressed in fitting phrases, and he has enriched also the spiritual life of the nation and of the world with a message so inspiring as to seem divinely sent."—New York Tribune.


Leader of Men

Photogravure Portrait of Theodore Roosevelt
"It is doubtful if any of the Roosevelt books possess the intimacy of treatment, the strength of philosophy, the admirable broadness of Leader of Men, ... a great message a message that is an honor no more to the author than to the memory of the great American who has so inspired him."—Brooklyn Eagle.


For Children

Seven O'Clock Stories

21 Color Plates by E. Boyd Smith
"It takes twenty nights to tell all the stories, and when that time comes the youngsters will beg to have the pages turned back, so that they may be read all over again."—N. Y. Times.

page label

Oh, Susanna!
A Romance of the
Old American Merchant Marine

By Meade Minnigerode

"Of course the curious events which it sets forth happened many years ago, and they refer to other events which had taken place long before, at the edge of misty coast lines fringed with palms, throbbing with the sound of ceremonial gongs, in sweet-scented gardens under the shadow of gilt pagodas, and on the quarterdecks of graceful sailing ships, riding at anchor at the mouths of mysterious rivers, in the golden days of the Yankee merchant mariners.

They still have the black lacquer box in the Parsons home, and they know its story now, and that of the Laughing Elephant, and the story of the Golden Haired Girl, who sang the song that went around the world. ..."

page label

THE MIND HEALER

By

RALPH DURAND

ONE would be doing a kindness to holiday-makers and stay-at-homes alike, by recommending The Mind Healer, by Ralph Durand. Here comedy runs laughing through the thrill and mystery of a suspected crime, and the hunting down of an innocent man. Dr. Alastair is as merry a companion as one could wish for, and the adventures and mishaps of a boating and fishing holiday in and out the picturesque little harbors of Cornwall are capitally done. It is refreshing to find a 'light novel' into which the author has put real good writing."—Daily Chronicle.

page label

Greensea Island

By Victor Bridges

He was second officer on a steamer plying between Brazil and London when the news came. And now he was heir to his black-sheep uncle, of whom he had known but little and had not seen since childhood.

The inheritance of a small island comes to John Dry den as the fulfilment of a long-cherished dream, and he immediately decides to make it his home.

With his material possessions he also inherits a mysterious enmity, the cause for which, though apparently connected with Greensea Island, is unknown to him. Rapid and exciting events lead ing to the solving of the mystery the romance, the perils, the girl make up the best yarn that has come from Victor Bridges' pen.


New York G. P. Putnam's Sons London