* * * * *
THE ROAD TO EN-DOR
By E. H. JONES, Lt, I.A.R.O.
With Illustrations by C. W. HILL, Lt., R.A.F.
Fourth
Edition. 8s. 6d. net.
This book, besides telling an extraordinary story, will appeal to everyone who is interested in spiritualism. The book reads like a wild romance, but is authenticated in every detail by fellow-officers and official documents.
Times.—“Astounding ... of great value.”
Daily Telegraph.—“This is one of the most realistic, grimmest, and at the same time most entertaining books ever given to the public.... The Road to En-dor is a book with a thrill on every page, is full of genuine adventure.... Everybody should read it.”
Morning Post.—“It is easily the most surprising story of the escape of prisoners of war which has yet appeared.... No more effective exposure of the methods of the medium has ever been written. This book is indeed an invaluable reduction to absurdity of the claims of the spiritualist coteries.”
Birmingham Post.—“The story of surely the most colossal ‘fake’ of modern times.”
Daily Graphic.—“The most amazing story of the war.”
Spectator.—“The reader who begins this book after dinner will probably be found at one o’clock in the morning still reading, with eyes goggling and mouth open, beside his cold grate.”
Punch.—“It is the most extraordinary war-tale which has come my way. The author is a sound craftsman with a considerable sense of style and construction. His record of adventures is really astounding.”
Country Life.—“More exciting than any novel.... The book is a record or almost incredible courage and inventiveness.”
Bystander.—“It is one of the most unexpected and engaging books for which the War has been responsible.”
Pall Mall Gazette.—“A really entertaining account of a wonderfully successful and useful rag on an unusually big scale.”
Westminster Gazette.—“Lieuts. Jones and Hill displayed an inventiveness, an ingenuity, and a patience worthy of the greatest admiration.”
Outlook.—“The book deserves to become a classic.”
Illustrated London News.—“It is an amazing story, humorously told, of a subtle and successful conspiracy to escape. But it is also a most telling indictment of the spiritualistic craze.”
New Age.—“As a mere story of adventure and suffering the book is one of the most remarkable known to me; it is an epic of human ingenuity and human endurance.”
Queen.—“Sensational and amazing ... absorbingly interesting.”
Daily Mail.—“A really striking and diverting story.”
Evening News.—“The tale of the two lieutenants is perhaps the noblest example of the game and fine art of spoof that the world has ever seen, or ever will see ... their wonderful and almost monstrous elaboration ... an amazing story.”