[A Dozen Ways Of Love by Lily Dougall]@TWC D-Link bookA Dozen Ways Of Love CHAPTER VI 17/38
6d. I.ZANGWILL, _Pall Mall Magazine_, says: 'Bryn, the heroine, is a charming creature, and some of the scenes with her half-crazed dying sister reveal strong imaginative power.' MRS LYNN LINTON, in the _Queen_, says: 'Another Little Dear has for her main quality unselfishness, penetrated through and through by love.
Such a character is Mary Avon in Douglas Sladen's striking novel, "A Japanese Marriage."' SILAS K.HOCKING, in the _Family Circle_: 'The stupidity, not to say immorality, of the English law, which prevents marriage with the deceased wife's sister, has rarely been more strikingly illustrated than in Mr.Douglas Sladen's clever novel, "A Japanese Marriage." I could wish the whole bench of bishops would read, mark, learn, and inwardly digest this sparkling and entertaining story.' HELEN MATHERS, in the _Literary World_, writes: 'Philip and Bryn--these two are so interesting and so true to life, the Japanese background against which they move in such noble but intensely human fashion is so exquisite, that the dullest of us must feel keen pleasure when we mingle intimately with the little people who have quite recently asserted their right to be reckoned with the greatest upon earth.' G.A., in the _Westminster Gazette_, says: 'Mr.Douglas Sladen's first novel is a distinct success.
To begin with, he has managed to capture a real live heroine, as charming and convincing a pretty girl as we have met with for years.
Her flesh-and-blood reality is quite undeniable.
She imposes herself upon one from the very first; she is winning and genuine, and as fresh as a daisy.' GILBERT BURGESS, in the _Illustrated London News_: 'This time it is the woes of the deceased wife's sister which are brought before us in a narrative that is invariably picturesque, and, especially as to the latter half of the volume, is of considerable humour and pathos.' NORMAN GALE, in the _Literary World_: 'Bryn, a girl beautiful exceedingly, only a little past twenty years of age--"sweet and twenty" indeed!--loving Philip purely, and purely loved by him in return, living alone with a young widower.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|