'All Gaul Is Divided'
$1.00
GREYSTONE PRESS
FRANCE, once one of the best-known and bestloved European countries to Americans, has become amazingly remote and isolated since the German conquest. Letters and newspapers arrive with a delay of weeks, even of months. This lends special interest and value to the news from occupied France which one finds in this little collection of letters, which are vouched for by Mrs. Dwight Morrow. The middle-class family whose experiences are described lived for a time in the country near Bordeaux and later in Paris, so that one obtains both the town and the country aspect of life under foreign occupation. The letters are a voice worthy of France at its best, intelligent, lively, balanced, informative. The picture is necessarily one of bleak deprivation, material and spiritual; but there is a noteworthy absence of hysteria and exaggeration.
W. H. C.
W. H. C. WILLIAM HENRY CHAMBERLIN
E. D. ELIZABETH DREW
W. F. WILSON FOLI.KTT
R. M. G. ROBERT M. GAY
R. H. ROBERT HILLYER
A. J. N. ALBERT JAY NOCK
F. W. FRANCES WOODWARD