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KATHLEEN COYLE. An able writer, Mrs Belloc Lowndes, speaks of Kathleen Coyle’s "ine. sincere, singularly vivid work.” “Youth in the Saddle” is the third of her novels, and the best. It is a novel ol Ireland old and new, written “with all her heart and all her science,” to make the reader see the “land of mists, lost causes, and high endeavours,” in this story the land to which the heroine, Shule, and her brother Roddy sacrifice themselves. Mrs Lowndes calls her "poet and realist.”

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/SUNAK19270902.2.128.3.1

Bibliographic details

Sun (Auckland), Volume I, Issue 139, 2 September 1927, Page 12

Word Count
85

KATHLEEN COYLE. An able writer, Mrs Belloc Lowndes, speaks of Kathleen Coyle’s "ine. sincere, singularly vivid work.” “Youth in the Saddle” is the third of her novels, and the best. It is a novel ol Ireland old and new, written “with all her heart and all her science,” to make the reader see the “land of mists, lost causes, and high endeavours,” in this story the land to which the heroine, Shule, and her brother Roddy sacrifice themselves. Mrs Lowndes calls her "poet and realist.” Sun (Auckland), Volume I, Issue 139, 2 September 1927, Page 12

KATHLEEN COYLE. An able writer, Mrs Belloc Lowndes, speaks of Kathleen Coyle’s "ine. sincere, singularly vivid work.” “Youth in the Saddle” is the third of her novels, and the best. It is a novel ol Ireland old and new, written “with all her heart and all her science,” to make the reader see the “land of mists, lost causes, and high endeavours,” in this story the land to which the heroine, Shule, and her brother Roddy sacrifice themselves. Mrs Lowndes calls her "poet and realist.” Sun (Auckland), Volume I, Issue 139, 2 September 1927, Page 12

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