Chapter 21
D. APPLETON & CO.'S PUBLICATIONS.
M
ANY INVENTIONS. By RUDYARD KIPLING
Containing fourteen stories, several of which are now pub. lished for the first time, and two poems. I2mo, 42} pages. Cloth, $1.50.
"llie reader turns from its pages with the conviction that the author has no supe« ior to-day in animated narrative and virility of style. He remains master of a powei n which none of his contemporaries approach him — the ability to select out of countless letails the few vital ones which create the finished picture. He knows how, with a phrase or a word, to make you see his characters as he sees them, to make you fee) the full meaning of a dramatic situation." — New York '1 ribune.
"'Many Inventions' will confirm Mr. Kipling's reputation. . . . We would cite with pleasure sentences from almost every page, and extract incidents from almost every story. But to what end ? Here is the completest book that Mr. Kipling has yet (jiven us in workmanship, the weightiest and most humane in breadth of view." — Pall Mall Gazette,
" Mr. Kipling's powers as a story-teller are evidently not diminishing. We advise everybody to buy ' Many Inventions,' and to profit by some of the best entertainment that moder.i fiction has to offer." — Neiu York Sun.
" ' Many Inventions ' will be welcomed wherever the English language is spoken. . . . Every one of the stories bears the imprint of a master who conjures up incident as if by magic, and who portrays character, scenery, and feeling with an ease which is only exceeded by the boldness of force." — Boston Globe.
"The book will get and hold the closest attention of the reader." — American Bookseller.
" Mr. Rudyard Kipling's place in the world of letters is unique. He sits quite al and alone, the incomparable and inimitable master of the exquisitely fine art of short- story writing. Mr. Robert Louis Stevenson has perhaps written several tales wliich match the run of Mr. Kipling's work, but the best of Mr. Kipling's tales are matchless, and his latest collection, 'Many Inventions,' contains several such." — Philadelphia Press.
"Of late essays in fiction the work of Kipling can be compared to only three— Blackmore's ' Lorna Doone,' Stevenson's marvelous sketch of Villon in the ' New Arabian Nights,' and Thomas Hardy's 'Tessofthe D'Urbervilles.' . . . It is probably owing to this extreme care that ' Many Inventions ' is undoubtedly Mr. Kipling's best book." — Chicago Post,
" Mr. Kipling's style is too well known to American readers to require introduction, but it can scarcely be amiss to say there is not a story in this collection that does not more than repay a perusal of them all." — Baltimore American.
" As a writer of short stories Rudyard Kipling is a genius. He has had imitators, but they have not been successful in dimming the luster of his achievements by con- trast. . . . 'Many Inventions' is the title. And they are inventions— entirely origi- nal in incident, ingenious in plot, and startling by their boldness and force." — Rochester Herald.
" How clever he is ! This must always be the first thought on reading such ?. collection of Kipling's stories. Here is art — art of the most consummate sort Com- pared with this, the stories of our brightest young writers become commonplace." — New York Evangelist.
" Taking the group as a whole, it may be said that the execution is up to his best ill the past, while two or three sketches surpass in rounded strength and vividness ot imagination anything else he has done." — Hartford Courant.
"Fifteen more extraordinary sketches, without a ting'- of sensationalism, it would ?>e hard to find. . . . Every one has an individuality of its own which fascinates tll'i lender." — Boston Times.
