Publisher's Synopsis
The author, Edna Worthley Underwood, tells us that these letters are genuine, that they are the result of an acquaintance curiously begun over a hotel telephone with a famous artist who was attracted by the quality of her laugh. For this reason they relate very largely to artistic subjects.The art of letter-writing, it seems, is not quite dead. It has seemed to be. It is true that most of these letters are too short, but that is doubtless a concession to the spirit of the age. Let us hope at least that they were not typewritten. -"The Argonaut," a Vol. 84