WINNETKA TALK October 15, 1927 BOOK SHOP FOUNTAIN SQUARE EVANSTON Tel. University 1024 Wil. 3700 Rogers Park 1122 FICTION Jalna Mazo de la Roche Little, Brown ¥ Co. Kitty Warwick Deeping Alfred A. Knopf ...... Dangerous Business Edwin Balmer Dodd, Mead 8 Co. ....... $2.00 The Mad Carews Martha Ostenso Dodd, Mead % Co. Jeanne Margot Sophia Cleugh ..$2.50 Macmillan . .$2.00 The Cap of Youth Being the love romance of Rob- ert Louis Stevenson. John A. Stewart Lippincott: ....«vvvi vos vo32.50 An Unmarried Father Floyd Dell Dorn isin vnc een $2.00 Transition A Mental Autobiography Simon © Schuster NON-FICTION The Red Dragon Lewis Stanton Palen Houghton, Mifflin ¥ Co... .$2.00 The Pageant of Civilization World Romance and Adventure as Told by Postage Stamps. F. B. Warren The Century Company. ...$6.00 Cleared for Strange Ports Mts. Theodore Roosevelt, St., and Mr. and Mrs. Kermit Roose- velt and Richard Derby. Scribner's . oc... civsrn33-50 Wildwood Fables Arthur Guiterman E. P. Dutton $ Co. ...... $2.00 LORD'S--BOOKS First Floor Just Inside the West Davis Street Door NEW ST BOOKS AND BOOK REVIEWS | | Just Paragraphs By Esther Gould Heinrich Mann, brother of the fa- mous German novelist, Thomas Mann, will make his first appearance on the lists of American publishers this year. Simon and Schuster will bring out first his story "Mother Marie." Under the title "Bismark, the Tril- ogy of a Fighter," there will be pub- lished this fall a group of three plays Gift Suggestions in Books 7 2 Now is the right time for you to come in and look over the marvelous assortment of new books we are suggesting as Christmas gifts. We have a complete supply of titles in appropriate bind- ings now, and additional books are coming in every day. Standard authors leather-! und Complete works covers Children's books for children of every age miscellaneous titles New Fiction Jalna (Atlantic $10,000 Prize Novel) Mazo de la Roche......... $2.50 The Mad Carews Martha Ostenso ...... vee 3250 Kitty Warwick Deeping, author of Sorrell and Son ........ .$2 Something About Eve James Branch Cabell.......$250 Let's Go, An Epic of Youth and War « Louis Felix Ranlett .......$2.50 Twilight Sleep Edith Wharton .......... $2.50 Miscellaneous Titles America Hendrik Van Loon........$5.00 Up the Years from Bloomsbury George Arliss ............$4.00 Reminiscences of Adventure and Service Maj. General A. W. Greely .... 50 7 irr rire, Ti dire didiirisiiiiiitiriiiiiieiiiiiiiiiiiidiidididd did dddddddd ddd 7 ZZ 7dr iiiiiiteetenl SASS SSIS SIS II IIIS SSS SS SSSI S SSAA SIS ISIS IIS ISAS SISAL SASSI IIIS ISIS S SSIS SS SSL AAAS SSS SS SSS SSSI ANA SAAS Ld A SSS SSSA SSSA SAA LI SSSA LSS LS SSS SSS SSL SSS SSS SS SSS SSS SSS SSSSSSSSSSSS LSS SSL SS SS SSS SSS SS SSS SSS LASS SSS SS SSS SS SS SSS 7 SASL SSS SSS SASS SSS lie idiiddedddddds SSIS SSIS SSIS SISSY. Phone University 123 7 NY IT LLLTSSSSLSSSSSSSSSSSSSLSSS SSS SSS LSS SSL S SSS LS SSS SSSA SSS which have played more than a thous- and times in various parts of Germany. The former Kaiser tried to stop the | production of the first of the plays | which deals with the dismissal of Bis- | mark and the character of the ruler, | but he was unable to do so and the controversy aroused only added to their popularity. "DREAM OF A WOMAN" By Remy de Gourmont. Boni & Liveright. Remy de Gourmont's novel "Le Songe d'une Femme"--"Dream of a Woman"--has been translated into English for the first time. It is said to have been de Gourmont's favorite of his novels. It is a story of love and nothing else, the sort of story that only a European and perhaps best of all a Frenchman, can write. When Americans do it they produce "The Sheik," a story to thrill the gum- chewing multitudes; when the French do it they produce somthing like this-- decidedly caviare for the few. De Gourmont has written his story of love in a series of letters from a number of different people. The let- ters are all beautifully written and all written in the same style, except one or two very youthful ones which are painfully simple. This gives the story less actual verity but more unity than if every two or three pages, for the letters are short, we were transported into a different style. The writers of the letters are varied and yet classifiable, two young women both mastered by the passion of love who after an interval of ten years begin to correspond and lie to each other competently about their experi- ences, two young men insatiably curi- ous and quite heartless, two very young girls in different stages of innocence, two older men who are necessary to complete the four love episodes. The style is poetical and precise: "I am in the state of a soul about to enter into Paradise. My soul is not yet within the beautiful luminous prison: it is culling the last flowers of freedom. It is sure of tomorrow's happiness, but it does not yet feel the quivering of supreme joy, and certainly has not yet enfolded it in its divine but inflexible arms," says the young girl about to be married. That her fiance IN A YUN-NAN COURTYARD By Louise Jordan Miln So Wing--soldier, trader, lover, the Chinese Robin Hood, has it in his power to make or mar the double romance which makes this thrilling novel. Never has Mrs. Miln better portrayed the beauty and romance of China. Frederick A. Stokes Co. $2.00 AMERICA By Hendrick Willem Van Loon As in his famous "Story of Man- kind," Mr. Van Loon has made history as thrilling as fiction. This is the story of our own background, the struggle of the pioneers to make what we have today and the later influences which mold our lives. Boni & Liveright $5.00 is at the moment the lover of her father's mistress is a little irony whicl has not vet entered to mar the Para dise. "DUSTY ANSWER" By Rosamond Lehmann. Henry Holt & Co. "Ah what a dusty answer gets the soul When hot for certainties in this our life!" But not always so dusty an answer as does Judith in this charmingly written novel by Rosamond Lehmann. "Dusty Answer" is the story of the little girl and later the young woman Judith in her first contacts with the world. When Judith was a child the children next door provided all the romance of her life. There were five of them, cousins, Mariella the grave. Charlie the handsome, Julian the cyn- ical, Roddy the fascinating, and Mar tin the stupid but kind. Toward these children Judith fel drawn with an irresistable fascina- tion, they made the core of all her dreaming, her knowledge, and yet they stood apart from her in a curious aloofness, in the bond of blood rela- tionship. "They were all collected at the front door as she came down the drive . . . What a way they had of all standing as if to prevent a stranger from breaking in among them!" Yet Judith does break in and with each of them--except Charlie who is killed at nineteen in the war--she has her exerience of love. She becomes Roddy's mistress, Martin loves and asks her to marry him, Julian tries to win her, while Mariella who married Charlie loves Julian in vain. So are the strands of Fate tangled even as they might be in actual life. Yet Judith's experiences are a shade fan- tastic, a little exaggerated to seem entirely real. The charm of the book is in the firm delicate style, and in the creation of delichtful characters, peonle distin guished and intelligent, who because their experiences are not those met in ordinary life convince us more com nletelv of their delightfulness than their absolute veracity. PRETTY FAIR "NOW EAST NOW WEST" By Susan Ertz D. Appleton & Co. Susan Ertz has written some aw- fully good books. Her "Madame Claire" had an unusual amount of charm, "Nina" had less charm and per- haps more substance, "After Noon" had less substance and less charm. It is necessary though sad, to say that tha came ic true of her latest "Now East Now West." Tt hasn't very much substance nor very much charm. The type of woman that Miss Ertz pictured so delicately in Madame Claire is less well done in Kate All- rood. The wistful inarticulate look- ing on at some part of life which one has missed or passed is in both Kate and the main character of the book. George Goodall. The friendship be- tween these two is the pleasantest thing the story offers, an ideal friend- ship--seldom happening outside of books, alas--in which the woman leads the man to further fields of beauty and understanding and the man goes with her and remains true to his wife. ie EER EL RE Rae