Pearl of Pearl Island eBook

John Oxenham
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 265 pages of information about Pearl of Pearl Island.

Pearl of Pearl Island eBook

John Oxenham
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 265 pages of information about Pearl of Pearl Island.

Barbe of Grand Bayou.

Red cloth, 2s. net; red leather, 2s. 6d. net.

“There is a fascination about Mr. John Oxenham’s books which grows upon one.  Barbe is a clean-cut, fine drawn character, human, alive, womanly, real.  Her history is so simply related, with such convincing straightforwardness that one is bound to admit it could not have happened otherwise.  It had to be.  The tribulations of the pair of lovers are delightfully set forth with the art of the true story teller.  Quite one of the best books of the winter season; worth buying and reading; not merely ordering from the library.”—­Academy.

Giant Circumstance.

Illustrated by CHARLES HORRELL.

THIRD EDITION.  Crown 8vo, cloth, 6s.

“A hearty and manly book, written in telling style of which Mr. Oxenham has proved himself a master.”—­Times.

“Told in Mr. Oxenham’s usual spirited and vivid style.  Those who relish a good story well told will welcome ‘Giant Circumstance,’ and will set it on a level with the best of Mr. Oxenham’s books.”—­British Weekly.

“A good story—­should prove popular.”—­Athenaeum.

“Bright, healthy, and interesting, will strengthen his position in the regard of readers who like a good story of the doings of wholesome unexaggerated characters.”—­Daily Telegraph.

Rising Fortunes.

Crown 8vo, cloth, 6s.

Carette of Sark.

Illustrated.  Crown 8vo, cloth, 6s.

“All who either know the Channel Islands or love a full-blooded, exciting story, should speedily make the acquaintance of Carette.”—­Pall Mall Gazette.

“No one who likes tales of adventure—­and who does not—­could wish for a better tale than this.  It is of Sark, in the beginning of last century, when its people were peaceable and law-abiding, save on the question of ‘free trade’ and when privateering was a legitimate business; so naturally adventurers were more easily come by than in conventional days like these.  The youth who tells the tale, one Philip Carre by name, comes by them all too easily for his liking.  He is scarcely out of one peril before he is into another, and quite split-hairbreadth are his escapes from the Terrible Torode of Herm.  And it is all on account of Carette, charming Carette, the pride of the island, and worth many dangers to win.”—­Daily Chronicle.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Pearl of Pearl Island from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.