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O Segredo das Larvas 1st Edition

Stefano Volp
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656

20–6283

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Santa Fe describes the beginnings and development of one of the
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of Cyrus K. Holliday, and developed by the energy and financial
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through the mountains to the old mining centre, Santa Fe. It is an
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and hindrances, both natural and those presented by the devilish
ingenuity of man.”—Boston Transcript

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has done his work very well.” J. S. B.

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R of Rs 61:672 Je ’20 30w

BRADLEY, MRS MARY (HASTINGS).


Fortieth door. *$1.75 (2c) Appleton

20–2264
A romantic adventure story staged in Cairo, Jack Ryder, altho
young and good to look at, has managed to evade the society of girls
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to romance. It is only when the dance is over, his heart already well
lost, that he learns that her attire is no picturesque disguise donned
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20–22478

These fairy tales have been collected by the author from the natives
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of special interest.”

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book. il *$2 (4c) Little

20–18407

A book of new fairy tales into which the author has put much of the
true fairy-land atmosphere. Some of the titles are: Dame Grumble
and her curious apple tree: A tale of the Northland kingdom; The
little tree that never grew up; The tale of Punchinello; The strange
tale of the brown bear. The illustrations are by Alice B. Preston.

+ Springf’d Republican p9a D 5 ’20 70w

BRAITHWAITE, WILLIAM STANLEY


BEAUMONT, ed. Anthology of magazine verse for
1919; and Year book of American poetry. *$2.25
Small 811.08

Mr Braithwaite who omits from this annual volume his usual


critical introductory essay takes occasion to call attention to Edwin
Arlington Robinson’s “The valley of the shadow,” as a poem
demanding careful attention and study. Other notable poems are
Leonora Speyer’s “The queen bee flies,” Sara Teasdale’s “August
moonrise,” Vachel Lindsay’s “The empire of China is crumbling
down,” Lola Ridge’s “The everlasting return”; also poems by Witter
Bynner, Scudder Middleton, Edna St Vincent Millay, Louis
Untermeyer, Maxwell Bodenheim, Amy Lowell, and others.

+ Booklist 16:194 Mr ’20

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“Taken as a whole, the ‘Anthology of magazine verse for 1919’


possesses distinct merit as a collection of contemporary verse. As a
stepping-stone in the steady advance of American poetry it is even
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find every day in the magazines, that of Conrad Aiken, Sara Teasdale,
Clement Wood, Edwin Arlington Robinson, and sundry others. There
is singing here that is something more than verse, and there is verse
that is something less than poetry.” R. P. Utter

+ − Nation 110:238 F 21 ’20 100w

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than its predecessors. The critical material at the back is more
restrained than hitherto, and gains thereby. For those who wish to
keep up with the best of the new poetry, the book is indispensable.”
C. W.

+ N Y Call p10 My 23 ’20 400w

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magazine verse can never have the highest value because the best
American poetry is not published in magazines. This year, at any
rate, that would seem to be untrue. It is doubtful whether anything
better than Edwin Arlington Robinson’s ‘Valley of the shadow’ has
been published in any of the books of the year.” Marguerite
Wilkinson

+ N Y Times 25:140 Mr 28 ’20 360w

“Mr Braithwaite’s annual ‘Anthology of magazine verse’ improves


from year to year. The present volume is no exception to this rule.
Particularly to be commended is the elimination of Mr Braithwaite’s
usual attempt at rating the verse of the year according to merit.”

+ Outlook 124:203 F 4 ’20 100w


“Mr Braithwaite has done his work with knowledge, with
discernment, and with a liberality which sometimes compromises his
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+ − Review 3:236 S 15 ’20 300w


Springf’d Republican p8 Mr 9 ’20 750w
+ Survey 43:554 F 7 ’20 150w

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excellent but not significant. As with every anthology, we quarrel
with the selections. Though the book would gain by omissions, the
general level is a high one.” E: B. Reed

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BRAITHWAITE, WILLIAM STANLEY


BEAUMONT, ed. Book of modern British verse. *$2
Small 821.08

20–1984

“A collection intended to acquaint American readers with


contemporary British verse in the period which ‘began with an
assault upon reality and a shock of symbols’ to be disturbed and
perhaps re-directed by the forces of war.” (Booklist) “John
Masefield’s ‘August, 1914,’ is included, and G. K. Chesterton’s
booming ‘Lepanto,’ also favorite poems by Wilfrid Wilson Gibson,
Walter de la Mare, J. C. Squires, Ralph Hodgson, Joseph Campbell,
James Stephens, Thomas MacDonald and many others. William
Butler Yeats, probably the greatest of all living makers of lyrics, is not
represented. But it is generally understood that his work seldom
appears in anthologies.” (N Y Times)

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Grenfell’s ‘Into battle’—finest of all the ‘war poems’; de la Mare’s ‘The
listeners.’ And these are only a few of the memorable things
included.” H: A. Lappin

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prose.” Marguerite Wilkinson

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A wild-west story that opens in Madison Square garden, where


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father is killed and Anthony goes West to follow the trail of the slayer
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tenderfoot he takes unrealized risks, but his skill and daring always
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BRANOM, MENDEL EVERETT. Project
method in education. (Library of educational
methods) *$1.75 Badger, R. G. 371.3

19–15249

In his first chapter on “The nature of the project method,” the


author discusses the term “project” and the different meanings
assigned to it, saying, “There is no fundamental difference of opinion
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degree of elasticity that should be permitted. In every case a unit of
purposeful, intellectualized activity is involved.” The chapters that
follow take up: The evolution of the project as an educational
concept; The relation of the project method to instincts; The social
basis for the project method; The significance of motivation;
Teaching by projects; Learning by projects; The project-question;
The project-exercise; The project-problem; Manual or physical
projects; Mental projects not involving manual activity; The project
method in history; The project method in geography; The
reorganization of the course of study; The preparation of the teacher.
There are twelve pages of references and an index.

“A valuable discussion of the project method.”

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socialism is the most dangerous enemy to civilization and that
socialist agitation “threatens to ruin not only the existing order but
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refute. Professor Thomas Nixon Carver of Harvard university writes
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and aims; Criticism of the Marx theory; The great socialistic
experiment in Russia; Socialist explanations of the failure in Russia;
Socialistic agitation in Europe and America; Social revolution or
social reconstruction.

“Mr Brasol’s book gives a just though not a neutral estimate of the
character and aims of modern socialism.” J. E. LeRossignol

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Vandervelde, Rauschenbusch and others, although the constructive
proposals given in the last chapter might to some extent at least
mitigate the admitted evils of the present system.” L. M. Bristol
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BREASTED, JAMES HENRY, and


ROBINSON, JAMES HARVEY. History of
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20–5789

A work based on the authors’ “Outlines of European history.”


“Chapters 1–20 have been completely rewritten, simplified, and
condensed; and more space has been given to Roman history and
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been reconsidered from beginning to end.” (Preface) The
bibliographies have also been revised. Part 1 of the book, Earliest
man, the Orient, Greece and Rome, is by Professor Breasted. Part 2,
Europe from the break-up of the Roman empire to the French
revolution, is by Professor Robinson.

Booklist 17:165 Ja ’21

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BREBNER, PERCY JAMES (CHRISTIAN


LYS, pseud.). Ivory disc (Eng title, Gate of
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20–10366

Dr Bruce Oliver had, until nearly his fortieth year, found women
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But when Estelle Bocara came into his life, his heart awakened. She
felt and responded to his love, but she was already married to an
eastern professor and mystic. As their acquaintance grew and their
intimacy developed, Dr Oliver found Estelle at times to be under the
strange mesmeric power of her husband, when she committed
crimes of which she had no knowledge. Thinking her mental
condition due to physical injury received in her childhood, Dr Oliver
performed a successful operation on her brain. In an effort to
complete the cure, Oliver put himself in Bocara’s power, with almost
disastrous results. Fortunately for him, another victim of Bocara’s
cruelty freed them both, and the obstacle to marriage with Estelle
was removed. The ivory disk of the title is the amulet, the gift of
Estelle which Oliver believes saved him from death.

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advancement in literary style; had it been so in Mr Brebner’s case he
would not have opened one of his chapter-sections with such a
passage as ‘The crisp air of the morning had not yet let go of the
world.’”

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army medical corps on the western front during the first months of
the war and relates with full detail the whole story of its efforts,
failures and achievements, with especial reference to the service of
its field ambulances.” Springf’d Republican

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Springf’d Republican p8 Jl 10 ’20 50w

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BRIDGE, SIR FREDERICK. Westminster
pilgrim. il *$8 Gray, H. W.

19–14604

“This bulky but entertaining book recounts a great deal more than
the story of a pilgrimage to Westminster. It might excusably claim to
be the history of the Abbey itself during the last half-century—
coronations, funerals, choral functions, musical services, etc., having
all the prominence that the organist would naturally consider their
due. First and foremost, it is an autobiography of the chatty gossipy
order; the life-story of a singularly busy musician who rose from the
ranks, who came into contact with many of the leading men of his
time, and who by his own showing never lost an opportunity for
profiting by his talents or his peculiar fund of ready wit and
jocularity. But in addition to this it deals now and again with serious
musical topics, more particularly, of course, those which have come
within the orbit of the author’s own wide professional experience.”—
Sat R

“On the whole, however, the book suffers from those very
excellences which make Sir Frederick so eminently suited to his
office.”

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excellently got up.”

+ Sat R 127:508 My 24 ’19 1200w


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successful life, and the record of his professional activities makes
excellent reading, for Sir Frederick Bridge is an admirable
raconteur.”

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—Dickens, Tennyson, Browning; but it seems that the organist of the
Abbey is most likely to meet great men at their funerals. His friends
who were not great in the worldly sense are much more
entertaining.”

+ The Times [London] Lit Sup p233 My 1


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BRIDGE, NORMAN. Marching years. il *$2.50


(3c) Duffield

20–18955

The above title is given to the autobiography of a noted physician


of New England origin, the eighth generation in direct descent of
Deacon John Bridge, to whom a bronze statue has been erected near
Harvard university. Dr Bridge was graduated from the Chicago
Medical college, served on the teaching staff of Rush Medical college
for two decades and is the author of many publications on medical
subjects, a list of which is appended to the text.

BRIDGES, ROBERT. October. *$1.50 Knopf 821


“‘October, and other poems’ does not bring anything particularly
new to bear on Mr Bridges’s poetry. Its principal value is to show the
poet laureate’s reactions to the war.” (N Y Times) “The best that we
get is a quiet sound to arms in ‘Wake up, England,’ a tribute to
victory in ‘Der tag: Nelson and Beatty,’ a ghostly dialogue between
the victorious admirals of the past and present, some stanzas on
‘Britannia victrix,’ in the orthodox tradition of rehearsing the spirit of
England’s greatness, some tributes to personal friends who were lost
in the war, laurel-verse for the great soldier Lord Kitchener, sonnets
to America in joining the fight for liberty, praise for the dominions
for throwing in their lot with the mother of the brood, and other such
occasional verses.” (Boston Transcript)

“The disappointment, if we may call it disappointment, of this


small book is that so much of its room is taken up by poems of a
more or less official inspiration. Nothing he writes, be the occasion
never so official or the inspiration tenuous, is marred by a touch of
shoddy; the dignity of poetry is safe in his hands. This dignity has no
pomposity. It is only a name for the austerity and candour that mark
the true artist.”

+ − Ath p472 Ap 9 ’20 640w

Reviewed by S: Roth

+ Bookm 52:361 D ’20 160w

Reviewed by W: S. Braithwaite

+ Boston Transcript p4 Ag 28 ’20 1150w

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