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"TAKING A LIBERTY."

("'omplirn! ions that follow when a. grass

widow makes <OO close friends with n. married couple who live next door, and of ♦ lie struggle* and failure of one man to he loyal to two women at the same time, ale set out at some length in "Taking a Liberty," a tale that will interest the reader who finds entertainment- in such problems. It. is all rather a dreary business, and perhaps would have, been more e.xciting if the man concerned had killed someone, even himself, in thp. course of his .struggles. But although ho had been to the war. and was "evidently a pood soldier while there, he was too much of a gentleman to kill anyone in civilian life, and so the story had to flow with a few ripples to a quiet end. " Taking a Liberty," by Mrs. 0-. H. Bell (John Travers). (HodUer and Stoughton.)

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19320227.2.170.66.6

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Herald, Volume LXIX, Issue 21118, 27 February 1932, Page 9 (Supplement)

Word Count
151

"TAKING A LIBERTY." New Zealand Herald, Volume LXIX, Issue 21118, 27 February 1932, Page 9 (Supplement)

"TAKING A LIBERTY." New Zealand Herald, Volume LXIX, Issue 21118, 27 February 1932, Page 9 (Supplement)