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DR. CONAN DOYLE ON FICTION

... I1D1.. CONAN DOYLE ON FICTI'1ON. | . . ?? La. HIS Our Corresponidenst at Lucerne writes: i 'ile :o rerda fe r teircs week ik colluection with the o euniol {olforences convened by tho Rev. l)r, Lurim iu- he Cludced a lecture by Dr. Conan oDyle. It was ...

REVIEWS

... sacrificial devotion to a complete and perfect study. Othier ineli have died- for love and worms have eaten them; Mr, Conan Doyle would, it -seems, die on behalf of local colour. The battle of local colour has been contested desperately for the past ...

NOVELS OF THE DAY

... NOVELS OF TILE DAY. I I NEW BOOK BY DR. CONAN DOYLE. [PUBLISHED TO-DAY,] In A Duet wita an Occasional Chorus (Grant 1Rtichards), Mr. Conan Doyle nakes a low depaorture. h'is littlh voluule is simply anl ueonullt of the iyear of hnllay' a spent by ...

LITERARY & OTHER NOTICES

... ere homes of silent prayer. The Christmas number also includes stories specially written by Grant Allen, B, L. Fesrjeon, Conan Doyle, Lord Brabourne, Florence Warden, Mrs. Campbell Praed, Henry Herman, and A. T. Pask. These are all illustrated in colwurs ...

LITERATURE AND SCIENCE

... , C. Foran, n f R. i5ast, J. H. Ball, M. Hyde, A. Howell, Dr. 1 e A. Conan Doyle and Dr. J. Ward Coasius a t (Hon. Secretaries), and Mr. G. F. Bell (Secretary.I t 1 -Dr. CONAN DOYLE, one of the Hon. Seoretaries, I t read the nineteenth annual report, ...

REVIEWS

... as- only an appetizer. 1 The Natal Campaign. By Bennet Burleigh. (London: Chapman and Hall.) STORIES ,BY DR. CONAN DOYLE.+ DR. CONAN DOYLE to the war has'gone, but lie has left thirteen very appropriate stories behind him. They all deal- either with ...

NEW BOOKS

... considers one book of his is equal to four by other people ; or else- uAnyhow, Messrs. Hall Caine, Jerome K. Jerorie, A. Conan Doyle, and Parry Pain have got to divide the honout between them. The value of, the honour can, of course, only be measured by ...

PORTSMOUTH LITERARY AND SCIENTIFIC SOCIETY

... Penny-street, Portsmouth, when there were present :n Mr. W. Weston, ?? in the chair, Surgeon-Major J. Lamprey, M.D., ?? Dr. A. Conan Doyle, Mlessrs. J. A. Wilson, %.N, J. E. Blakeney, J. Hay, n, Dr. J. Ward Cousins, bon. sec., Mr. G. A. Bell, &G. I, The following ...

LITERARY ITEMS

... Matthew Arnold was a delightful as well as a f and regular correspondent, and the letters are very bright nd readable.-flr. Conan Doyle returned from America in the Etruiria. His lecture tour in the States has, we understand, been a great success.-A full and ...

LITERARY NOTES

... returned to the House of Commons, but Mr. Anthony Hope was debarred from standing, and Dr. Conan Doyle has failed, as Thackeray and Trollope did before him. Dr. Conan Doyle, I believe, could write a good political novel, and restore a genre which has lamentably ...

THE THEATRE

... Exploits of Brigadier Qerard. By A. Conan Doyle. (Londut George Newnes.) This is a republication of a serial first brought O' in the Strand Magazine. Of cousse, like everything that comes from the Pe of Dr. Conan Doyle, the stories, are most interesting ...

New Novels

... helpless slaves of the convolutions of some ancestral brain. THE REFUGEES It has been left to our own century, writes Mr. Conan Doyle in a note to The Refugees (3 vole.: Longmans, Green, and Co.), to clear the fair fame of Madame de Maintenon of all reproach ...

Published: Saturday 15 July 1893
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 983 | Page: 13 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture