The author's
vivid and vigorous style, skillfully developed plots, her intensely
sympathetic treatment of emotional scenes, and the strongly delineated
character sketches, are typical of Ethel M. Dell's best work, and this
volume will be found to contain some of the most remarkable of her shorter
romances.
G.P. Putnam's Sons
New York London
Prairie Flowers
By
James B. Hendryx
Author of "The Texan"
When Tex Benton said he'd do a thing, he _did_ it, as readers of "The
Texan" will affirm. So when, after a year of drought, he announced his
purpose of going to town to get thoroughly "lickered up," unsuspecting
Timber City was elected as the stage for a most thorough and sensational
orgy.
But neither Tex nor Timber City could foresee the turbulent chain of
events which were to result from his high, if indecorous, resolve, here
set down--the wild tale of an untamed West.
A well-known writer, who has served his apprenticeship in the cow country,
said the other day, "I like Hendryx's stories--they're real. His boys are
the boys I used to work with and know. His West is the West I learned to
love."
G.P. Putnam's Sons
New York London
The Ivory Fan
By
Adrian Heard
When Lily Kellaway makes the observation, "It is better to be a slave to a
man, which is natural, than to a woman, which is intolerable," she recites
the text upon which the author of _The Ivory Fan_ has built up a novel
that is at once humorous in its cynicism and cynical in its humor.
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