THE UNBIDDEN GUEST. By E. W. HORNUNG, AUTHOR OF ‘TINY LUTTRELL,”’ ‘‘A BRIDE FROM THE BUSH,’ ETC. With Frontispiece and Vignette. Crown 8vo, Cloth, $1.00. «©, , . the heroism in this romance at once excites your curiosity. . . . Mr. Hornung has the exact qualities of the story teller. You delight in being fooled, and the author fools you to the top of your bent. . . . ‘The Unbidden Guest’ is a remarkable story, replete with pathos, and though there is plenty of fun-in it the dramatic effects are the more conspicuous. It is only a writer of exceeding talent who could work up a heroine like Missy and make you not only forgive but like her.”—New York TiMEs. ‘© tale of Australia with a plot which is not in the least trite, and a heroine quite of the unusual order. . . . Thestory is well told.”.—Pusiic OPINION. ‘A strong and clever story.”"—THE WorLp, N. Y. “*The Unbidden Guest’ is bold in conception and tender in treatment. . . . Mr. Hornung has written quite a little gem of romantic fiction, thoroughly Australian in setting, thoroughly natural, if a little improbable, perfectly illusive, both as to character and as to incidents, and atleast as pathetic in its situations as ‘A Bride fromthe Bush.” . . . Many will be disposed to think it the best story which its author has produced.” —ANTHENEUM. THE NEW EDEN. A STORY. By C, J. CUTLIFFE HYNE, With Frontispiece and Vignette. Crown 8vo, Cloth, Ornamental, $1.00. “ One of the most peculiar stories of the fall. . . . The tale unfolded is very ingene jous, interesting, and well written. It is imaginative decidedly. . . The way these untutored human beings act upon meeting, and afterwards, is told with great dexterity, and primitive human nature is revealed in many aspects. The mental un- foldings resulting from their experiences and surroundings are decidedly interesting, and the descriptions of scenery are brilliant . . . fascinating reading, is charmingly idyllic, and above all is original from cover to cover.”—Boston TimEs. _‘'Acleverly written story. . . . The masculine traits of Adam and the feminine traits of Eve, inherent in both, are wrought out with skill and naturalness, and the whole makes an unusually interesting study and is also analogy from which many interesting con- clusions can be drawn.”—HARTFORD TIMES. “The book is an excellent piece. of purely imaginative writing, and is wholly original in its conception.”—PuBLic OPINION. . ‘ Something in a new vein. It ought to make a sensation, and we hazard nothing in saying that it will sometime run through many editions. We have here the best work of a brilliant author.”,—BosTon TRAVELLER, “A book that is likely to arouse no little animated comment. . . . His chronicle of the experiences of a modern Adam and Eve is full of entertainment as well as of wisdom. . . The tale has obviously more than one meaning, and it is carried out with so much vivacity and verisimilitude that it cannot fail to excite a very decided interest.” —TueE Beacon, Boston, LONGMANS, GREEN, & 00,,15 EAST 16th STREET, NEW YORK.