Judge, 1921-06-04 · page 27 of 36
Judge — June 4, 1921 — page 27: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1921-06-04. Page through the whole issue in the reader above.
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Romance, Realism, Mystery, Adventure— Here Is Fiction for Every Taste BEAUTY By Rupert Hughes As Rupert Hughes adds each new vol- ume to that group of novels which has been called the American “Comédie Humaine” he does two things. He pro- vides his readers with a story as thrilling and intense as they have ever read and he lays bare a cross-section of the life ofour country and our times. “Beauty” is a mystery story with one of the most orig- inal and most daring plots ever carried through page after page of tingling sus- pense to a conclusion which has every re gard not only for the possibilities but the probabiliies as well. You must not miss it. Illustrated by W. T. Benda. $2.00. THE SEVENTH ANGEL By Alexander Black “In the ‘Seventh Angel’ our author writes wisely and very, very well... . Alexander Black is always Alexander Black, which is as it should be. The ‘Seventh Angel’ is vivid—incredibly so. It has flashes of great beauty, it has flashes of great sordidity. It has of great illuminative truth. It is finer than * The Great Desire,’ which makes it very fine. It is a book to place on that little shelf where one keeps the novels one re-reads. It ts a novel that your children and your children's children will be reading.” Robert Garland, in the Baltimore News. $2.00. THE MADONNA OF THE HILLS By Arthur Guy Empey “Mr. Empey certainly whoops over the top again in his first novel . . . the story holds one’s attention and has scenes of real dramatic quality.”—The New York Herald. “A tale with plenty of incident, the story of a fight... the struggle of a girl against the forces of New York's underworld. The author has tangled up the lives of his characters cleverly, and his pictures are often vivid and impress the reader as realistic.—N. Y. Times. “There are bits that make a lump rise in one's throat and tears come to the eyes. Itis worth reading.”—Baltimore Sun. $2.00. Est. 1817 STAR DUST By Fannie Hurst The first novel by this young writer already famous for her remarkable short stories. Heywood Broun, of the New York Tribune, calls it “One of the best novels of the year... . It is not only that she writes supremely well, but she can make the reader see her persons as well as hear them.” _ In speaking of ‘Star Dust" the Boston Transcript says Our clearest and deepest conviction is that Fannie Hurst should write more and more novels. If it is permissible to speak of the promise of one who has so abundantly proven her ability, I should say that at no time of her career has Fan- nie Hurst exhibited fairer promise than at the present moment.” Ask for Fannie Hurst's first nov $2.00. THE SILVER S By Ruth Sawyer To an ever increasing number of nor- mal Americans of healthy tastes the pub- lication of a new novel by Ruth Sawyer is an occasion for rejoicing and thanks- giving. Of her latest the New York Times Book Review says: “‘The Silver Sixpence’ is a novel whose characters are sane and upright and clean. __ It is like a whiff of clean fresh air straight out of the country, blowing down slummy city streets. There are charm and beauty and sparkle upon the surface of the na rative, and underneath a serious, solid conception of life and character . . . real insight into the depths of human nature.” Illustrated. $2.00. ON SECRET SERVICE By W.N. Taft Twenty-four rattling good detective stories, based on actual exploks of our Secret Service operatives. The narra- tor is one Bill Quinn, ex-Secret Service man, whose name both marks and su gests the actual source of the author's material. Don't miss these tales of smugglers and moonshiners and coun- terfeiters and foreign spies and the men who shadow and run them down for the United States Government. They are the sort that make you forget to go to bed. The Boston Post calls them the ‘best collection of short detective stories t has been published for a long time. $2.00. cE HARPER & BROTHERS THE MYSTERIOUS RIDER By Zane Grey This new novel is the masterpiece of a master story-teller. Never has Zane Grey written a finer, truer, more dramatic tale than this. He knows his West and he knows his people; he is blood brother to his own hardy characters. He is America’s most popular living author. Read ‘The Mysterious Rider”—you will no longer be susprised that over 160,000 copies have been sold in the last four months. “In this novel of the moun- tain regions of Colorado there is not one dull page. From cover to cover it is throbbing with life, color, action."—N. Y. Evening Post. $2.00. “ATTERGOOD BAINES By Clarence Budington Kelland If you haven't met Scattergood yet you are missing something worth-while. The things this shrewd, witty Yankee philosopher says are becoming part of the American language. John W. Davis, Director of the Department of Education of New York City wrote to the publishers: “I enjoyed it to the full. T have just finished reading it for the second time. Scattergood is a won- derful combination of Socrates and David Harum, and when he begins to wiggle his tocs and think aloud he injects some of the wisdom of Solomon into his remarks. Make = Scattergood’s _ac- quaintance—he is a charming compan- jon. $2.00. THE FILM MYSTERY By Arthur B. Reeve Craig Kennedy, scientific detective and the successor of Sherlock Holmes as the leading light of his profession, undertakes a case which leads him into the heart of the moving picture world. Actors and actresses you know are among the char- acters in this tale of mystery and in- trigue, and the background of studios and ghts is authentic. The New York Times sa t is not often a novel is presented containing two power- ful elements of interest. That is one rea- son why this book is likely to prove one of the most popular in the whole Craig Ken- nedy series.” $2.00. New York “104 Years of Good Books” wear Aleta ctetn — na i comicbooks.com