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Dơnload Holmes and Watson An Evening in Baker Street David Ruffle Full Chapter
Dơnload Holmes and Watson An Evening in Baker Street David Ruffle Full Chapter
Dơnload Holmes and Watson An Evening in Baker Street David Ruffle Full Chapter
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Another random document with
no related content on Scribd:
CHATHAM, DENNIS, and CHATHAM,
MARION, pseuds. Cape Coddities. il *$1.35 (7c)
Houghton 917.4 20–10073
20–3884
“The tales have each its special sharpness, but how little are they a
moralizing and how much a sophistication, an enrichment of
experience!”
“Chekhov applies the knife, which is his eye, to everyone alike. And
in this critical insight is one of his distinguishing characteristics. To
read Chekhov is to come in contact with a man of great sensitiveness
and witty subtleties yet a man of wide sanity and plain humane
feeling.” F. H.
“His stories are replete with interest, with vivid glimpses of the
baffling Russia of yesterday. It is a picture of hopelessness painted by
a master without hope.”
+ N Y Times 25:22 Je 27 ’20 660w
20–5392
“It may be said that the letters of Chekhov are at first sight
disappointing. They corroborate only faintly and unemphatically the
life so vivid in outline. Either they have been subjected to a drastic
process of selection and expurgation, or they represent the reduction
of experience to an even, neutral tone of objective observation, of
detachment, almost of indifference. Both explanations are doubtless
in a measure true. Among letter-writers he belongs to the school of
Prosper Merimée rather than Stevenson.” R. M. Lovett
“In spite of the early and full maturity of Tchehov’s mind and
intellect we seem to retrieve in his letters the consciousness and
sensibility of childhood with all its vividness and absorption.”
[2]
CHELEY, FRANK HOBART. Overland for
gold. *$1.50 Abingdon press
20–4892
“Its scene laid in the early ’60s, Frank H. Cheley’s new story for
boys tells of the adventures of a party of gold seekers who made their
way to Colorado in the days when Denver was a town of shacks to
which the law had as yet scarcely penetrated. Clayton Trout, one of
the two boys in the party, is the narrator and tells how his uncle
Herman, who had been in the gold rush to California, equipped a
small company with tools, food, etc., and several wagons drawn by
oxen, and set forth to meet the dangers and difficulties of the trail.
The book describes first the journey, on which they encountered
Indians, herds of buffalo, wolves, etc., and then the arrival at
Mountain City and the adventures which befell them in their search
for gold.”—N Y Times
“This is a ‘corking’ good story.”
20–4120
20–21085
The book aims to map out the broad outlines of the problem of
human efficiency and lays no claim to academic or scientific
treatment. “Today as never before we are called upon to mobilize all
our thoughts, acts and emotions in the name of efficiency” but
“efficiency is not a mechanical thing; it is the science of life itself”
and scientific management and welfare work have only taken the
first steps towards humanizing the life of the worker. Contents:
Introductory; Human efficiency; What is fatigue? Applied
psychology; Selecting employees; Scientific management and the
welfare of the worker; Appendix: Handling the human factor;
Training executives for efficiency; How to establish an efficiency
club.
“There is nothing very new in the matter or treatment; there are
the usual generalities and assumptions, but the book is clearly
written.”
(Eng ed 19–19083)
20–1624
In this collection of papers the author, in his characteristically
discursive fashion, gives his impressions of the Irish character as an
almost paradoxical combination of visionary dreamer and practical
peasant. He emphasizes the fundamental differences between the
English and the Irish out of which arise many if not all the tragic
mistakes made on both sides. The contents are: Two stones in a
square; The root of reality; The family and the feud; The paradox of
labour; The Englishman in Ireland; The mistake of England; The
mistake of Ireland; An example and a question; Belfast and the
religious problem.
“Neither his book nor his visit indicates any real appreciation of
the almost agonizing seriousness of the issue between his country
and Ireland.” E. A. Boyd
“He proves in this book that even the most patriotic of Englishmen
can treat another patriotism with magnanimity.” F. H.
“Mr Chesterton does not write for the man in the street; his style is
full of brilliant paradox, subtle allusion, and pages in which one must
read between the lines for their meaning. But the game is worth the
candle.”
+ Outlook 124:291 F 18 ’20 100w
“The volume has both the virtues and the defects to be expected
from one whose writing is almost entirely a succession of figures.
‘Irish impressions’ contains an amazing amount of true comment.”
N. J. O’Conor
20–5411
“One can agree perfectly with Mr Chesterton in his plea for greater
care in marriage partnerships and in hoping that the sanctity of the
family may be preserved. But his arguments seem often rather
strained, especially when coupled with his zeal in pumping up the
wildest and most extravagant and often frivolous fireworks of style.”
N. H. D.
“As is often the case with his writings, it hits mainly into the air
and does not meet the arguments of his opponents where they are
strongest. Also, one gets tired of the perpetual punning which once
gave this writer the reputation of being a great wit but which really is
quite easy to imitate.”
20–7298
“So ingenious a mystery that devotees will forgive the loose plot
structure and the improbable characterization.”
“The whole problem is put and solved in an original way, and some
readers will be grateful for a mystery story without the old properties
and machinery.” H. W. Boynton
+ Bookm 51:584 Jl ’20 250w
“In ‘The vanishing men’ it is easy enough to pick flaws, but over
and above them all remains the great fact that the story interests the
reader from the beginning, holds his attention and brings up with a
smashing climax at the end.”