Part 24 (2/2)

A New Book by the Author of ”Our World!”

A WORK OF GREAT POWER AND INTEREST.

JUSTICE IN THE BY-WAYS.

BY F.C. ADAMS.

_12mo., Cloth, $1.25._

The _Evening Post_ of June 23d says:

”Shortly will be published a new work, ent.i.tled 'JUSTICE IN THE BY-WAYS,' from the pen of F.C. ADAMS, author of the popular anti-slavery novel 'OUR WORLD.'

”It presents a life-like picture of that peculiar civilization which of late has so signally blossomed in the ruffianly achievement of Brooks.

”Mr. ADAMS, the author, formerly editor of the _Savannah Georgian_, is qualified by a residence of five years among the nullifiers of the Palmetto State to exhibit a correct and graphic likeness of their society and manners.”

This is emphatically a work of our age. Its life is its TRUTH. Its breath its FACT. It is history in the guise of fiction, history whose accuracy is attested by public records and State doc.u.ments. Each character is a living reality. It is a book eminently suggestive of much needed moral reforms. It is not sectional. It hits North and South. It shows the social evils generated by Slavery in the one, and by neglected poverty in the other. It pictures the follies and vices of worn-out Southern chivalry; the crimes of the forsaken wretches in the Five Points; and the sordid sin which luxuriates in our Fifth Avenue palaces.

It portrays how those who the world regard as beacons illuminating the paths of virtue, grovel in sensuality--sought and loved for its own sake; whilst the neglected of the world, in their depths of degradation, yet emit some rays--feeble though they be--of a soul within. In fine, it teaches the practical lesson that it would become the great to learn how a true use of their wealth and influence may benefit poor fallen humanity.

LIVERMORE & RUDD, PUBLISHERS,

310 BROADWAY, N.Y.

W.H. Tinson, Stereotyper, 24 Bookman street.

A Work of Unusual Interest and Merit!

TO BE PUBLISHED EARLY IN SEPTEMBER,

THE p.a.w.nBROKER.

OR,

THE WAGES OF AVARICE.

_12mo., Cloth. Price $1.25._

The Publishers believe that ”The p.a.w.nbroker” is not inferior, either in power or interest, to any other work of Fiction that has been yet issued from the American Press; while the local interest it possesses, in consequence of its truthful delineation of New York life, forms one of its many attractive features. It is the production of an American lady, who is endowed with a fine culture, a refined and polished idea of the requirements of Virtue and Civilized Life; together with a clear insight of the human heart, whether bowed down by its own dark depravity, or consoled and elevated by the n.o.ble instincts of honor and truthfulness.

But this is not all; our auth.o.r.ess is an Artist, and her book will do credit to Modern American Literature.

Her Hero and Heroine are taken from the humblest walks of life; but our interest becomes almost at once, unconsciously enlisted in their welfare, and with intense excitement, pain, and hope, the thread of the narrative which depicts their chequered, trying and varied career, is perused. This effect is produced, without bombast or enervating sentimentality; simply because a story founded upon fact is narrated with becoming dignity, modesty and consummate Literary Art. The characters introduced throughout the work are numerous; but each possesses a peculiar, marked, and distinct individuality.

A writer in the _Boston Literary Bulletin_ says of it:

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