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SCRIBNER'S BRIEF LIST OF FICTION.

H. C. Bunner.

THE STORY OF A NEW YORK HOUSE. Illustrated by A. B. Frost (12mo $1.25)—THE MIDGE. (12mo, $1.00)—IN PARTNERSHIP. With Brander Matthews (12mo, paper, 50 cts.; cloth, $1.00).

"It is Mr. Bunner s delicacy of touch and appreciation of what is literary art that give his writings distinctive quality. Everything Mr. Bunner paints shows the happy appreciation of an author who has not alone mental discernment, but the artistic appreciation. The author and the artist both supplement one another in this excellent Story of a New York House."—The New York Times.


Frances Hodgson Burnett.

THAT LASS O LOWRIE'S. Illustrated (paper, 50 cents; cloth, $1.25)—HAWORTH'S. Illustrated (12mo, $1.25)—THROUGH ONE ADMINISTRATION. (12mo, $1.50)—LOUISIANA. (12mo, $1.25)-A FAIR BARBARIAN. (12mo, $1.25—SURLY TIM, and Other Stories (12mo, $1.25).

The above 6 vols., in uniform binding, $7.50 per set.

LITTLE LORD FAUNTLEROY. Illustrated by R. B. Birch (Sq. 8vo, $2.00)—SARA CREWE; or, What Happened at Miss Minchin's. Illustrated by R. B. Birch (Sq. 8vo, $1.00).

Earlier Stories by the same author, each 16mo, paper covers.

LINDSAY'S LUCK (30 cts.)—PRETTY POLLY PEMBERTON (40 cts.)—KATHLEEN (40 cts.)—THEO (30 cts.)-MISS CRESPIGNY (30 cts.).

"Mrs. Burnett discovers gracious secrets in rough and forbidding natures—the sweetness that often underlies their bitterness the soul of goodness in things evil. She seems to have an intuitive perception of character. If we apprehend her personages, and I think we do clearly, it is not because she describes them to us, but because they reveal themselves in their actions. Mrs. Burnett's characters are as veritable as Thackeray's."—Richard Henry Stoddard.


William Allen Butler.

DOMESTICUS. A Tale of the Imperial City (12mo, $1.25.).

"Under a veil made intentionally transparent, the author maintains a running fire of good-natured hits at contemporary social follies. There is a delicate love story running through the book. The author's style is highly finished. One might term it old-fashioned in its exquisite choiceness and precision."—The New York Journal of Commerce.