Fick represents the ambitious Zurich school, a middle ground between the 0-erman and French schools. This book takes an entirely unoccupied place in brerman literature. It is compact, thorough, and exhaustive, has no padding in the way of statistics or unnecessary pathology. Its physics is clearer and more orderly than in the majority of books, while its arrangement is far superior and more logical. The treatment is modern, simply and plainly given. Disputed and special operations do not occupy an unequal amount of space. The translator will also assume the role of editor, and adapt the text, when necessary, to American and English methods, and has added sections on skiascopy, etc. Dr. *?< i contrikuted some special notes for this edition. " The volume before us has been written by the author, because he is of opinion that the best text-books of ophthalmology are too exhaustive, and he has en- deavoured to supply the student with a compact treatise, in which pathological statements and hypotheses, as well as authorities, should be referred to, only so far as they may be necessary to illustrate, diseased conditions, and which might prove supplementary and complementary to the clinical study of diseases. The translation, we may say at once, is creditable to Dr. Hale of Chicago. It reads easily, and is, as a rule, satisfactory. . . . " The treatise is divided into two parts, the first dealing with the methods of ex- amination, including the means of determining the acuteness of vision and errors of refraetion,_the sense of light and of colour, the field of vision, and the tests for binocular vision and for strabismus, and giving also an account of the objective methods of examination, such as keratoscopy, oblique illumination, and the use of the ophthalmoscope. The second part is devoted to the diseases of the eye, which are considered in the usual topographical order, each being preceded by a short account of the histology of the part. The observations made by the author are, as a rule, those of an unprejudiced mind, and although they might, in some instances, have been extended with advantage, yet they are sufficiently intellig- ible. . . . '' THE BOOK IS A VALUABLE ONE, AND REPRESENTS TRUTHFULLY AND WELL THE PRESENT STATE OF OPHTHALMIC SCIENCE AND PRACTICE."—Lancet. FROTHINGHAM.—A Guide to the Bacteriological Labora- tory. By LANGDON FROTHINGHAM, M.D. Illustrated. Price 4s net. The technical methods involved in bacteria culture, methods of staining, and microscopical study are fully described and arranged as simply and concisely as possible. The book is especially intended for use in laboratory work. GARRIGUES.—Diseases of Women. BY HENRY J. GARRIGUES, A.M., M.D., Professor of Obstetrics in the New York Post-Graduate Medical School and Hospital; Gynaecologist to St. Mark's Hospital, and to the German Dispensary, etc., New York City. In one very handsome octavo volume of about 700 pages, illustrated by numerous wood-cuts and coloured plates. Price, cloth, 21s net. A practical work on Gynaecology for the use of students and practitioners, written in a terse and concise manner. The importance of a thorough knowledge of the anatomy of the female pelvic organs has been fully recognised by the author, and considerable space has been devoted to the subject. The chapters on Operations and on Treatment are thoroughly modern, and are based upon the large hospital and private practice of the author. The text is elucidated by a large number of illustrations and coloured plates, many of them being original, and forming a complete atlas for studying embryology and the anatomy of the female genitalia, besides exemplifying, whenever needed, morbid conditions, instruments, apparatus, and operations.