In this book Mr. Sacheverell Sitwell, looking at the Netherlands through his own eyes rather than through those of his many predecessors, has produced a pic-ture of the country which may appear un-orthodox only because of its unfamiliarity. In his belief Holl&, as a country, is as individual as Russia or as Spain, & there is a great deal more to be seen & enjoyed in it than the picture galleries, windmills, canals, flower markets & bare empty churches which seem to have impressed previous writers. It has been Mr. Sitwell`s endeavour to get out of the museums & into the open-air-out of the museums &, likewise, away from the great cities (although not without having entered some of the old & forgotten patrician houses of The Hague & Amsterdam). In this way the author has discovered a new & beautiful Holland in which the architecture of the eighteenth century, the strange villages & costumes of Friesl&, or the art of a Daniel Marot & a Cornelis Troost are taken as truly representative of this at once phlegmatic & poetical people & the man-made wonders of their largely artificial country. The result is a book both to awaken curiosity &, so far as a book may do so, to satisfy it-more especially as the very numerous photographs go side by side with the text & illustrate it at almost every point. If the traditionally pic-turesque & quaint appear as seldom among these illustrations as they do in the text the intelligent reader is presented all the more with a picture of a country whose proximity & unfamiliarity will form added inducements to a visit.