Description
Mr. Hamlin Garland writes in breezy, forceful familiarity with the vernacular of the average western American, to whom Chicago is the center of the universe. His new story, "A Member of the Third House," carries one on with intense interest to its dramatic denouement. It is particularly timely as being a story of American politics and a revelation of the corruption that prevails in the legislative life of some of the States.
-"Reviews of Reviews," Volume 5