BLACKIE & SON'S BOOKS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE. 11 BY GEORGE MACDONALD. A Rough Shaking. By Grorecz MacDoyanp. With 12 page Illustrations by W. ParKinson. Crown 8vo, cloth elegant, olivine edges, 6s. "One of the very best books for boys that has been written. It is full of mate- rial peculiarly well adapted for the young, containing in a marked degree the elements of all that is neces- sary to make up a perfect boys’ book.” —Teachers’ Aid. At the Back of the North Wind. By Geo. Mac Donatp. With 75 Illustrations by ARTHUR HUGHES. Crown 8vo, cloth ele- gant, olivine edges, 5s. “The story is thoroughly original, full of fancy and pathos. . . . We stand with one foot in fairyland and one on common earth.” —The Times. Ranald Banner- * man’s Boy- hood. By Gro. MacDonatp. With Reduced Illustration from “A Rough Shaking”. 36 Illustrations by Arruur Hueurs. Crown 8vo, cloth elegant, olivine edges, 5s. «The sympathy with boy-nature in Ranald Bannerman’s Boyhood is perfect. It is a beautiful picture of childhood, teaching by its impressions and suggestions all noble things.” — British Quarterly Review. The Princess and the Goblin. By Grorem Mac Donaxp. With 32 Illustrations. Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 3s. 6d. “Little of what is written for children has the lightness of touch and play of fancy which are characteristic of George Mac Donald’s fairy tales. Myr. Arthur Hughes’s illustrations are all that illustrations should be.” —Manchester Guardian. The Princess and Curdie. By Grorez Mac Donaxp. With 8 page Illustrations. Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 3s. 6d. “There is the finest and rarest genius in this brilliant story. Upgrown people would do wisely occasionally to lay aside their newspapers and magazines te spend an hour with Curdie and the Princess.”—Shefield Independent.