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The document lists various ebooks related to game AI programming, including titles such as 'Learning Game AI Programming with Lua' and 'AI Game Programming Wisdom.' It provides ISBN numbers and download links for each ebook, along with a brief overview of the content covered in 'Learning Game AI Programming with Lua.' The document serves as a resource for those interested in learning about game AI development using different programming languages and tools.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
13 views55 pages

(Ebook) Learning Game AI Programming With Lua by David Young ISBN 9781783281336, 1783281332 Download

The document lists various ebooks related to game AI programming, including titles such as 'Learning Game AI Programming with Lua' and 'AI Game Programming Wisdom.' It provides ISBN numbers and download links for each ebook, along with a brief overview of the content covered in 'Learning Game AI Programming with Lua.' The document serves as a resource for those interested in learning about game AI development using different programming languages and tools.

Uploaded by

ctgcelka
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Learning Game AI Programming with
Lua
Table of Contents
Learning Game AI Programming with Lua
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Support files, eBooks, discount offers, and more
Why subscribe?
Free access for Packt account holders
Preface
What this book covers
What you need for this book
Who this book is for
Conventions
Reader feedback
Customer support
Downloading the example code
Downloading the color images of this book
Errata
Piracy
Questions
1. Getting Started with AI Sandbox
Introduction to AI sandbox
Understanding the sandbox
The project layout
The Premake build
Compiling the sandbox with Visual Studio 2008/2010/2012/2013
Open source libraries
Open source tools
Lua IDE – Decoda
Running AI sandbox inside Decoda
Setting up a new Decoda project
Debugging Lua scripts
Decoda Watch window
Decoda Call Stack window
The Decoda Virtual Machines window
Simultaneous Lua and C++ debugging
Visual Studio – Attach to Process
Decoda – Attach to Process
Decoda – Attach System Debugger
Associating Lua scripts from code with Decoda
The Lua virtual machine
The Lua stack
Lua primitives
Metatables
Metamethods
Userdata
C/C++ calling Lua functions
Lua calling C/C++ functions
Function binding
Creating custom userdata
Looking at the vector data type
The demo framework
Ogre
Object-Oriented Input System
SandboxApplication
Sandbox
Agent
Utility classes
Lua binding
Summary
2. Creating and Moving Agents
Creating a new sandbox project
Setting up the file structure
Extending the SandboxApplication class
Running your sandbox for the first time
Creating a new Decoda project
Configuring Decoda’s run executable
Creating a sandbox Lua script
Creating a floor
Adding a light
Adding a skybox
Adding meshes to the sandbox
Creating sandbox objects
Shooting blocks
Creating an agent Lua script
Creating a visual representation
Updating an agent position
Updating an agent orientation
Agent properties
Orientation
The forward axis
The left axis
The up axis
Location
Position
Size
Height
Radius
Physics
Mass
The max force
The max speed
Speed
Velocity
Knowledge
Target
Target radius
Path
Agents’ movement
Mass
Speed
Velocity
Acceleration
Force
Agent-steering forces
Seeking
Applying steering forces to an agent
Clamping the horizontal speed of an agent
Creating a seeking agent
Pursuit
Fleeing
Evasion
Wandering
The target speed
Path following
Creating a path following agent
Avoidance
Collision avoidance
Obstacle avoidance
Avoiding blocks and agents
Group steering
Alignment
Cohesion
Separation
Creating a group of followers
Summing steering forces
Weighted sums
Priority-based forces
Summary
3. Character Animations
Skeletons and meshes
Mesh skeletons
Loading an animated mesh
Showing a skeleton
Attaching meshes to bones
Attaching a weapon to our soldier
Animation clips
Playing an animation on our soldier
Soldier animations
Crouching animations
Standing animations
Weapon animations
Soldier poses
Weapon poses
Manipulating animations
Enabling and disabling animations
Looping animations
The animation length
The animation time
Normalized time
Restarting an animation
Playing a non-looping animation
The animation rate
Animation blending
Animation weights
Blend window
Blend curves
Linear blending
Playing with blend weights
Animation state machine (ASM)
States
Transitions
Creating animation state machines
Creating helper functions
Adding states
Adding transitions
Adding external helper functions
Forcefully setting states
Requesting states
Updating the animation state machine
Handling state transitions and state requests
Updating running animations
Adding functions to animation state machine instances
Building a weapon animation state machine
Building a soldier animation state machine
Updating animation state machines
Playing with states
Summary
4. Mind Body Control
Creating a body
Creating a soldier
Attaching an animated mesh to an agent
Creating an obstacle course
Displaying the physics world
Adding callbacks to the animation state machine
Handling callbacks
Adding callbacks to the ASM
Updating the ASM to call callbacks
Getting our soldier to shoot
The bone position
The bone rotation
Creating particle effects
The particle direction
Object removal
The collision impact callback
Shooting a projectile
Handling projectile collision impacts
Shooting
Getting our soldier to run
Setting a path through the obstacle course
Running the obstacle course
Creating a brain
Approaches for mind body control
Direct animation control
The death state
The idle state
The falling state
The moving state
The shooting state
A simple, finite state machine
Initializing the agent
Agent FSM state handling
Indirect animation control
The animation controller
Commands
The command queue
Manipulating commands
The change stance command
The die command
The fall command
The idle command
The move command
The shoot command
Assigning member functions
Initializing the controller
Adding handlers for commands
Updating the controller
Running the obstacle course
Creating a direct control agent
Creating an indirect control agent
Indirect control agent initialization
Indirect control agent update
Indirect control agent control
Spawning an indirect control agent
Action latency
Summary
5. Navigation
Pathfinding
Creating a navigation mesh
Configuring navigation meshes
The walkable height
The walkable radius
The walkable climb height
The walkable slope angle
The minimum region area
Building the navigation mesh
Drawing the navigation mesh
Pathfinding on a navigation mesh
Path query
Query results
Random navigation points
The path information
Adding random pathfinding to our soldier
Updating agent paths
Drawing paths
Initializing the navmesh
Randomly running agents
Creating additional navigation meshes
Summary
6. Decision Making
Creating userdata
Agent actions
Adding data members
Initializing an action
Updating an action
Action cleanup
Action member functions
Creating actions
The idle action
The die action
The reload action
The shoot action
The random move action
The move action
The flee action
The pursue action
Evaluators
Creating evaluators
Constant evaluators
Has ammo evaluator
Has critical health evaluator
Has enemy evaluator
Has move position evaluator
Is alive evaluator
Can shoot enemy evaluator
50/50 chance evaluator
Decision structures
Decision trees
Branches
Decision leaves
Branch evaluation
Building a decision tree
Creating branches
Creating a decision tree agent
Strengths of decision trees
Pitfalls of decision trees
Finite state machines
States
Transitions
Finite state machine structure
Helper functions
Adding states and transitions
Updating the finite state machine
Adding instance functions
Building a finite state machine
The idle state
The movement state
The random movement state
The shoot state
The flee state
The die state
The pursue state
The reload state
Creating a finite state machine agent
Strengths of finite state machines
Pitfalls of finite state machines
Behavior trees
The behavior tree node
Helper functions
Updating the behavior tree node
Actions
Conditions
Selectors
Sequences
Creating a behavior tree object
Behavior tree helper functions
Selector evaluation
Sequence evaluation
Node evaluation
Continue behavior tree evaluation
The behavior tree update loop
Updating the behavior tree
Building a behavior tree
The death behavior
The flee behavior
Combat behaviors
The reload behavior
The shoot behavior
The pursue behavior
The move behavior
The random move behavior
The idle behavior
Creating a behavior tree agent
Strengths of behavior trees
Pitfalls of behavior trees
Summary
7. Knowledge Representation
Knowledge sources
Creating a knowledge source
Knowledge source evaluation
Blackboards
Creating a blackboard
Adding and removing knowledge sources
Evaluating knowledge sources
Setting and retrieving blackboard attributes
Blackboard member functions
Creating soldier knowledge sources
Enemy selection
Flee position selection
Constructing a soldier blackboard
Updating decision evaluators
Updating behavior actions
The die action
The flee action
The idle action
The move action
The pursue action
The reload action
The shoot action
Summary
8. Perception
Events
Attributes
Sending events
Receiving events
Managing events
Assigning agent teams
Handling agent communications
Event types
Creating agent senses
Initializing senses
Updating senses
Agent visibility
Detecting other visible agents
Agent sighting events
New enemy sighted event
New dead enemy body sighted event
New dead teammate body sighted event
Handling new agent sightings
Intermittent agent sightings
Throttling agent visibility updates
Creating event handlers
Adding event handlers
Agent auditory senses
Auditory events
The BulletShot event
The BulletImpact event
Handling auditory events
Decaying blackboard events
Decaying auditory events
Team communications
The EnemySelection event
The PositionUpdate event
The RetreatPosition event
Updating agent behaviors
Enemy selection
Scoring dangerous positions
Score danger from bullet impacts
Score danger from bullet shots
Score danger from enemies
Score danger from dead bodies
Calculating the best flee position
Summary
9. Tactics
Influence maps
The cell height
The cell width
Constructing an influence map
Configuration
Voxelizing a navigation mesh
Drawing influence maps
Accessing influences
Setting influences
Getting influences
Clearing influences
Spreading influences
Cell inertia
Cell falloff
Influence map layers
Updating the influence map
Soldier tactics
Initializing and updating tactics
Scoring team influences
Initializing team influences
Updating team influences
Configuring team influences
Scoring dangerous areas
Tapping into agent events
Adding event handlers
Initializing dangerous influences
Updating dangerous influences
Configuring team influences
Summary
Index
Learning Game AI Programming with
Lua
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A biography, based upon an accurate knowledge of recent
developments along the line of Mary Stuart controversy, “while
making no attempt to give any detailed account of it.” (Lond.
Times.) “It does not pretend to be anything more than a romantic
story of a woman told by a woman.... Mrs. MacCunn looks upon
Mary as simply an intensely passionate woman. So her volume, if
not the authoritative book on Mary, is perhaps one of the most
readable that have yet been produced. Its charm is enhanced by
numerous portraits and other illustrations, which are of the best
quality.” (Spec.)
“We have only indicated the attitude of Mrs. MacCunn towards
her heroine: it is candidly historical and perfectly womanly.”
Andrew Lang.

+ + – Acad. 69: 1146. N. 4, ’05. 1360w.


“The author had not space enough for controversy, but exhibits
complete balance of judgment. Her narrative is vivid, and avoids
rhetorical pursuit of the picturesque. She is extremely
sympathetic.”

+ Ath. 1905, 2: 569. O. 28. 870w.


“Miss Maccunn ... has subordinated everything else to her main
figure, and the result is a portrait glowing with animation.”
Lawrence J. Burpee.

+ Dial. 41: 62. Ag. 1, ’06. 1250w.


“Without omitting any salient facts or distorting any critical
situation, she has written a book which is real biography, and not a
mere contribution to controversy.”

+ + Lond. Times. 4: 397. N. 17, ’05. 830w.


“Among a host of technical and controversial monographs, it
stands out a simple lively narrative of the remarkable adventures
through which Mary Stuart passed.”

+ Nation. 82: 347. Ap. 26, ’06. 460w.


+ N. Y. Times. 11: 82. F. 10, ’06. 320w.
“Her book is an admirable piece of work, and we think should
remain the standard short history of one of the most familiar of the
many Queens of tears.”

+ N. Y. Times. 11: 156. Mr. 10, ’06. 400w.


“Her book is well written ... and if her conception of Queen
Mary’s character be correct, it is admirable.”

+ – Sat. R. 101: 144. F. 3, ’06. 1040w.


+ Spec. 95: sup. 794. N. 18, ’05. 810w.
McCutcheon, George Barr (Richard Greaves, pseud.).
Cowardice court. †$1.25. Dodd.
“Apparently the chief matter [of this tale] is the feud—a paltry
quarrel over some five hundred acres of Adirondack woodland,
which the young American refuses to sell even to a buyer of such
distinction as her ladyship of Baslehurst. Really, however, the chief
matter is the interest the English-bred Penelope takes in the
American enemy. The story goes of itself, runs away with itself
almost. There is a storm, a haunted house, some dog shooting,
much trespassing, and more lovemaking.”—N. Y. Times.

+ Critic. 48: 573. Je. ’06. 50w.


“Altogether absurd in incident and psychology, but decidedly
readable and engagingly romantic.”

+ – Ind. 60: 876. Ap. 12, ’06. 70w.


+ – N. Y. Times. 11: 242. Ap. 14, ’06. 200w.
N. Y. Times. 11: 383. Je. 16, ’06. 100w.
“Has somewhat too heavy a hand for his slight material.”

+ – Outlook. 82: 1004. Ap. 28, ’06. 50w.


Pub. Opin. 40: 736. Je. 16, ’06. 70w.

McCutcheon, George Barr (Richard Greaves, pseud.). Jane


Cable; il. in col. by Harrison Fisher. †$1.50. Dodd.
“‘Jane Cable’ is a love-tale with the strenuous sweep of the
Western metropolis for its atmosphere. The principals of the story
are a very flawless pair who enter the primrose path of romance
under promising auspices. Their roseate dream receives a rude
awakening by reason of certain family revelations which seem to
put a blot upon the girl’s birth and which blast the reputation of the
young man’s father. Some very ugly, tho not uninteresting,
characters are brought upon the scene. Chief among these is the
lawyer, Elias Droom, a character probably suggested by Uriah
Heep, but uglier.”—Lit. D.

“It is interesting to record, from personal observation, that


readers of ‘Jane Cable’ seem to evince the same absorption, the
same oblivion of time and space which a few years ago marked the
readers of ‘Beverly of Graustark.’” Frederic Taber Cooper.

+ Bookm. 24: 248. N. ’06. 410w.


“As a good melodrama should, the story takes hold in the first
pages with a grip that releases the interest only when the problems
are all solved.” Paul Wilstach.

+ Bookm. 24: 280. N. ’06. 400w.


+ Ind. 61: 941. O. 18, ’06. 90w.
“The characters are fairly well drawn and there is much diversity
of plot and incident.”

+ Lit. D. 33: 474. O. 6, ’06. 290w.


“‘Jane Cable’ is a well-told story, within the limitations of its
class.”

+ Outlook. 84: 582. N. 3, ’06. 90w.


“Is on the whole the best piece of work he has done.”

+ + – World To-Day. 11: 1222. N. ’06. 170w.

McCutcheon, George Barr (Richard Greaves, pseud.).


Nedra. †$1.50. Dodd.
“So farcical a plot demands a light and humorous touch and here
the author fails, for though he gets amusing situations, the
treatment of them is poor, and the dialogue is conspicuously
without humor.”

– Acad. 71: 526. N. 24, ’06. 210w.


– Ath. 1906, 2: 614. N. 17. 150w.

Macdonald, Ronald. Sea-maid. †$1.50. Holt.


Once upon a time the Dean of Beckminster and his prim wife
were cast shipwrecked upon a lone sea island, and when after
twenty years a certain ship’s company were marooned upon the
same island they found, with the Dean and his wife, their beautiful
daughter who dressed in savage garb and was eager to know of a
world she had never seen. This is the setting of a veritable farce-
comedy enacted by an English lord, a commonplace person with
whom he has changed names to avoid the advances of a passée
fortune hunter, the ship’s doctor, a girl who is “good sort,” an actor,
and several other people both good and bad. The book is frankly
intended to “draw smile and laugh.”

“There is somethings deliciously attractive in the serious manner


in which he handles the subject.”

+ Acad. 70: 205. Mr. 3, ’06. 310w.


+ Ath. 1906, 1: 294. Mr. 10. 280w.
“An uneven book, genuinely amusing in parts, distinctly
tiresome elsewhere.” Frederic Taber Cooper.

+ – Bookm. 23: 285. My. ’05. 270w.


“Of its kind ‘The sea-maid’ is good.”

+ Critic. 48: 475. My. ’06. 50w.


“For sheer entertainment this story is one of the best of the year,
and it is by no means devoid of the qualities that appeal to the
literary sense.” Wm. M. Payne.

+ Dial. 40: 263. Ap. 16, ’06. 210w.


“Is, in itself a harmless and in parts an entertaining and
refreshing story, showing touches of imagination and of humor;
but is none the less tainted with that peculiar flavor of cheapness—
coming perilously near vulgarity.”

+ – N. Y. Times. 11: 144. Mr. 10, ’06. 230w.


“The fault of the story is that it mingles the romantic, the
burlesque, and the melodramatic rather indiscriminately.”

– Outlook. 82: 619. Mr. 17, ’06. 130w.


“The book is an ingenious fantasy, and the reader will find that
the time he spends in reading it passes very pleasantly.”

+ Spec. 96: 390. Mr. 10, ’06. 280w.

MacDonnell, John de Courcy. King Leopold II., his rule in


Belgium and the Congo. *$6. Cassell.
“Though the work has the character of special pleading, still it is
not of the unusually low order of such partisan publications.”

+ – Critic. 48: 379. Ap. ’06. 190w.

McFadyen, John Edgar. Introduction to the Old Testament.


$1.75. Armstrong.
“The style is easy, clear, concise, and fulfills the purpose laid
down. It is a good piece of modern, up-to-date pedagogical work.”
Ira Maurice Price and John M. P. Smith.

+ + – Am. J. Theol. 10: 318. Ap. ’06. 280w.


“To each book of the old Testament he furnishes an introduction
which is written in the free critical spirit characteristic of modern
scholarship, and written, too, with a power to stimulate the
interests of his readers, and satisfy their just and reasonable
demands for information concerning the history and character of
writings regarded by so many as sacred Scriptures.”

+ + Ath. 1906, 1: 102. Ja. 27. 440w.


“The book supplies a recognized need.”

+ + Bib. World. 27: 79. Ja. ’06. 40w.


“By its brevity, clearness and interest the book is a good one to
serve as a manual for the student.” L. W. Batten.

+ + Bib. World. 28: 74. Jl. ’06. 180w.


“Utterly unfit to be put into the hands of the unsophisticated
readers for whom it is prepared. Hundreds of his statements are
either incorrect or rest upon a very unsubstantial foundation.”

– – Bibliotheca Sacra. 63: 377. Ap. ’06. 130w.


“For a readable account of what scholars hold regarding the Old
Testament without discussion of what is still problematical and
uncertain, Professor McFadyen’s treatise can be heartily
recommended.”

+ + Ind. 60: 518. Mr. 1, ’06. 260w.


+ Spec. 96: 305. F. 24, ’06. 280w.

Macfall, Haldane. Sir Henry Irving. *$1. Luce, J: W.


A character sketch of Sir Henry Irving, the man, his career and
his art. The volume is illustrated by Mr. Gordon Craig and includes
sketches of Irving in the characters of Robespierre, Macaire,
Dubrose, Badger and others.

“Though a trifle laudatory, Mr. Macfall has produced a lucid


portrait of his subject.”

+ – Dial. 41: 95. Ag. 16, ’06. 130w.


“In itself the little book, with its excellent paper, admirable
typography, and abundant margins, is attractive and artistic, but as
a tribute to Irving it is in almost all respects insufficient.”

– Nation. 83: 35. Jl. 12, ’06. 290w.


“The criticism is pitched in a high key of praise; and is too much
a panegyric to be always valuable as criticism; yet there is much
that is true said about Irving’s excellences.”

– + N. Y. Times. 11: 430. Jl. 7, ’06. 470w.


“An extremely interesting character sketch.”

+ Outlook. 83: 817. Ag. 4, ’06. 50w.

MacFarland, Charles Stedman. Jesus and the prophets; an


historical, exegetical, and interpretative discussion of the use of
the Old Testament prophecy by Jesus and his attitude towards it.
**$1.50. Putnam.
“For the ground which it covers, Dr. MacFarland’s book is
without doubt the best popular work on the subject in English, and
cannot fail to be helpful to all students of the Bible who prize exact
knowledge.” William R. Schoemaker.

+ + Am. J. Theol. 10: 128. Ja. ’06. 530w.


“It will stimulate even where it does not carry full conviction.”
John H. Strong.

+ – Bib. World. 27: 476. Je. ’06. 880w.


“The design of this book is excellent. Yet we cannot praise the
book unreservedly; the author is well up in the German critics and
shows a tendency to assimilate their conclusions rather too readily.
It is good to know German if one is going to write a book on the
Greek Testament; but it is better to know Greek.”

+ + – Sat. R. 101: 84. Ja. 20, ’06. 430w.


+ Spec. 95: 1087. D. 23, ’05. 110w.

Macfarlane, Walter. Principles and practice of iron and steel


manufacture. *$1.20. Longmans.
Written by one who understands teaching, this book is designed
primarily for technical students, metallurgists and engineers.

“It has the advantage of being short and, in general, accurate and
clear. Much of the data has not appeared in print before, but is
evidently taken from personal experience. Of the individual
chapters, those on the puddling process and tool steel are the best,
while the discussion of steel castings and the short chapter on
malleable castings are very far below the general standard.”
Bradley Stoughton.

+ + – Engin. N. 56: 51. Jl. 12, ’06. 800w.

MacGrath, Harold. Half a rogue. †$1.50. Bobbs.


There is a curious mixture of elements in Mr. MacGrath’s new
story. Play writing, municipal politics, social enmity, strikes, and
always love—from beginning to end it is the one quality which
leavens sordid states and makes burdens bearable. Katherine
Challoner leaves the stage to marry John Bennington, Richard
Warrington gives up playwriting to enter politics, and incidentally,
to woo Patty Bennington. A malicious busy-body, who tries to
recall ghosts of past indiscretions, fails, but not until Warrington
loses in the mayorality race. Yet he does win Patty.

MacGrath, Harold. Hearts and masks. †$1.50. Bobbs.


“The tale is not so good a story as ‘The man on the box’ but it will
doubtless prove almost as popular.”

+ Arena. 35: 222. F. ’06. 220w.


Reviewed by Frederic Taber Cooper.

+ Bookm. 22: 633. F. ’06. 370w.


+ Pub. Opin. 39: 859. D. 30, ’05. 110w.
Mach, Edmund Robert Otto von. Handbook of Greek and
Roman sculpture. $1.50. Bureau of university travel. [Ginn.]
A handbook prepared to accompany a collection of five hundred
reproductions of Greek and Roman sculpture.

“What he has done is both too little and too much; and the faults
that have been indicated tend to make any scholar view the book
with a distrust which, on the whole, it does not merit.”

+ – Ath. 1906, 1: 804. Je. 30. 840w.


“The impression made by the book is satisfactory, and it will
undoubtedly be of service, especially to the beginner in the study of
classic art. Mr. von Mach shows a thorough knowledge of his
subject, and there is a pleasing independence of view, although the
influence of the great teachers is plainly seen. There are a number
of typographical errors.” James C. Egbert.

+ + – Bookm. 23: 101. Mr. ’06. 790w.


Outlook. 83: 688. Jl. 21, ’06. 200w.

Mach, Edmund Robert Otto von. Outlines of the history of


painting, from 1200–1900 A. D. *$1.50. Ginn.
An arrangement which aims to aid art students in obtaining a
comprehensive view of the whole field of painting. The first part
comprises twenty-eight chronological tables of painters; the second
part, an alphabetical list of artists; the third, a brief account of the
history of painting.

“This should prove a convenient class summary and in general a


useful tabulation of painters and periods.”

+ Int. Studio. 30: sup. 58. D. ’06. 100w.


“Another who has helped us the better to understand Greek art,
Professor Edmund von Mach, has published a useful book.”
+ Outlook. 84: 705. N. 24, ’06. 120w.
+ + – Nation. 83: 446. N. 22, ’06. 250w.

Machen, Arthur. House of souls. †$1.50. Estes.


“This volume includes some previously published stories,
notably ‘The great god Pan’ and ‘The inmost light,’ which some
twelve years since appeared in ‘The keynote series;’ also ‘The three
impostors,’ which we best remember as a deft derivative from
Stevenson’s ‘New Arabian nights.’ The rest of the items are new,
but the same note of horror is struck with more or less emphasis in
all, and with a varying measure of success.”—Ath.

+ – Acad. 71: 136. Ag. 11, ’06. 800w.


“Mr. Machen is a very clever writer—so clever that it seems
almost a pity that he should persistently envelope his talent in
cerements of the bizarre.”

+ – Ath. 1906. 2: 129. Ag. 4. 340w.


“Whatever may be said for the making of gargoyles in general (or
satyrs in particular) as a question of art or of morals, whatever
your own taste may be in such matters, Mr. Machen is a master of
his method.”

+ N. Y. Times. 11: 578. S. 22, ’06. 700w.


“As regards the execution of the stories, Mr. Machen has style,
and a talent for the fantastic ... but he has not the power of creating
horror.”

+ – Sat. R. 102: 117. Jl. 28, ’06. 220w.

M’Kay, William D. Scottish school of painting. *$2. Scribner.


“Although Mr. McKay does not succeed in giving any clear
definition of what constitutes the Scottish school, or how it differs
from other schools, his well-written volume is full of interesting
details about the lives and works of Scottish painters, and tells us
something, though not quite enough about the organization of
painting in Scotland since it began to exist at all.”—Lond. Times.

“As a compact and compendious record of the work of painters


of Scottish nationality the book occupies a distinct place in art
history, and its standard of execution is uniformly high.”

+ + – Ath. 1906, 2: 246. S. 1. 1700w.


“In a sense this is a pioneer work. It is one which no student of
art should fail to own and to read with great care.”

+ + Critic. 49: 188. Ag. ’06. 360w.


“A smaller book dealing with the few leading painters of Scottish
birth and leaving out the nobodies would have been more
acceptable.”

– Ind. 61: 818. O. 4, ’06. 190w.


“We have no hesitation in commending this excellent volume,
not only to the art lover, but also to the student.”

+ Int. Studio. 29: 273. S. ’06. 490w.


Int. Studio. 29: sup. 83. S. ’06. 220w.
“We turn to his book for a retrospect rather than for a comment
upon the things of to-day. He knows what painting is, he is well
acquainted with the collections, public and private, he is a sound
critic, and he writes in an interesting way.”

+ + Lond. Times. 5: 266. Jl. 27, ’06. 770w.


“The author ... writes with knowledge and confidence of
technical matters, and the volume is fairly illustrated.”

+ Nation. 83: 54. Jl. 19, ’06. 120w.


+ – N. Y. Times. 11: 508. Ag. 18, ’06. 1080w.
“Excellent book.”
+ Outlook. 83: 671. Jl. 21, ’06. 50w.

MacKaye, James F. Economy of happiness. *$2.50. Little.


Dr. Mackaye’s universal panacea for the cure of all ills which
man is heir to is common sense, susceptible to tests which are
independent of the convictions of any man or assemblage of men.
Book 1 analyses common sense to disclose these tests; and Books 2
and 3 treat of the theoretical and practical technology of happiness.

“A book which deals with the ethical foundations of the subject


in a way that is both novel and profound. In fact the book is a
revolution in philosophy and aims at one in economics. He lays a
deeper and safer foundation for his socialism than Marx laid, and
he undermines most thoroughly the system of ethics upon which
the political and economic dogmas of competition and ‘laissez
faire’ have been based.” Ralph Albertson.

+ + – Arena. 36: 670. D. ’06. 4710w.


“Every socialist, sociologist, economist and serious journalist
should examine this book. For the wayfaring man it is perhaps too
solid, tho it is enlivened by brilliant, unforced epigrams and
humorous phrases.”

+ – Ind. 61: 813. O. 4, ’06. 1220w.


Lit. D. 33: 429. S. 29, ’06. 400w.
“It would have been better if he had condensed some and
omitted other parts of the earlier chapters which are unnecessarily
long and discursive.”

+ – Nation. 83: 370. N. 1, ’06. 210w.


“While the ethical doctrines of this work are thus objectionable,
there is much in its economic scheme for the promotion of social
happiness that is worthy of thoughtful consideration.”

+ – Outlook. 84: 90. S. 8, ’06. 530w.


R. of Rs. 34: 383. S. ’06. 70w.

MacKaye, James. Politics of utility: the technology of happiness—


applied; being book 3 of “The economy of happiness.” **50c.
Little.
Book 3 of James MacKaye’s “Economy of happiness” is
published separately, in inexpensive form because of its greater
popular interest, the hope being that the reprint may reach a wider
circle of readers than would care for the larger work.

Mackaye, Mrs. James Steele. Pride and prejudice: a play


founded on Jane Austen’s novel. $1.25. Duffield.
A four-act play founded upon Jane Austen’s eighteenth century
novel.

“Few of the peculiar excellences of the book survive in the play,


in which the lack of action, or of anything like real dramatic
interest, until the very end, is only too apparent.”

– + Nation. 83: 291. O. 4, ’06. 120w.


“A pleasing play.”

+ Outlook. 84: 385. O. 13, ’06. 120w.


“So far as the literary side is concerned, Mrs. Mackaye has done
her work well.”

+ Putnam’s. 1: 378. D. ’06. 90w.

Mackaye, Percy Wallace. Fenris, the wolf: a tragedy. **$1.25.


Macmillan.
Reviewed by Louise Collier Willcox.

+ – North American. 182: 753. My. ’06. 170w.


McKechnie, William Sharp. Magna carta: a commentary on the
great charter of King John. *$4.50. Macmillan.
“Mr. McKechnie may justly claim to have provided us with a
most adequate commentary on Magna Carta. His notes ... show
that he is widely read in the literature of his subject; and they are
admirably lucid. The book will be the more useful because it is
mainly a summary of the researches and theories of the best
modern critics.” H. W. C. Davis.

+ + + Eng. Hist. R. 21: 150. Ja. ’06. 880w.


“The most detailed and satisfactory examination of Magna
Carta.”

+ + + Nation. 82: 16. Ja. 4. ’06. 1570w.

McKim, Rev. Randolph Harrison. Problem of the Pentateuch.


**$1. Longmans.
“Lectures in reply to the ‘higher criticism’ of the Bible.... The
attractiveness of Dr. McKim’s book for the general reader, not
particularly interested in homiletical literature or the disputes of
theology, lies in its well-sustained tone of urbanity and its fairness
to the ‘higher critics.’ Dr. McKim does not hesitate to state their
arguments clearly. His own argument is interesting merely as a
revelation of the theories of the Pentateuch put forth by persons
who deny the inspiration and Mosaic origin of the five books.”—N.
Y. Times.

Bib. World. 28. 79. Jl. ’06. 50w.


“Doubtless every serious reader who picks up this book will find
that his curiosity has been aroused rather than that his mind has
been set at rest. But, for its scope, this brief volume is fairly well
put together.”

+ + – Cath. World. 83: 833. S. ’06. 510w.


Lit. D. 32: 945. Je. 23, ’06. 1540w.
“Despite the pains he has taken in the investigation of these
matters, it cannot be said that he has comprehended the case put
forward by historical criticism.”

– Nation. 83: 142. Ag. 16, ’06. 460w.


N. Y. Times. 11: 356. Je. 2, ’06. 340w.

McKinley, Albert Edward. Suffrage franchise in the thirteen


English colonies in America. $2.50. Ginn.
“Mr. McKinley’s book must of necessity become the standard
authority on this subject. The only lack is a bibliography.” Edward
Porritt.

+ + – Am. Hist. R. 11: 403. Ja. ’06. 1630w.

MacKinnon, James. History of modern liberty. set, **$10.


Longmans.
“The first volume consists of chapters chiefly on the
governmental institutions of the countries that once formed the
Western Roman empire; the second consists of chapters on the
course of the reformation in England and Scotland, France and
Germany, with a brief chapter of twelve pages on Spain in the
fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. A single chapter on mediaeval
political thought ‘in relation to liberty,’ which closes the first
volume, is balanced in the second by one on the writers on political
theory in the sixteenth century. For the rest, the strict adherence to
geographical divisions forbids an international and comparative
treatment, and no continuity of subject or idea is maintained.”—
Ath.

“Taken all in all, his book is both readable and instructive. It may
safely be commended to all whose enthusiasm for liberty needs a
stimulant.”

+ + – Am. Hist. R. 11: 876. Jl. ’06. 950w. (Review of v. 1 and 2.)
“Had the writer been willing to use more care and restraint, he
could have produced a better book, for he has zeal and industry, a
wide range of interest and knowledge, ambition and ability.”

+ – Ath. 1906, 1: 538. My. 5. 1620w. (Review of v. 1. and 2.)


“It may be seriously questioned whether the usefulness if the
work would not have been increased by the topical method of
treatment rather than the chronological. Professor MacKinnon’s
style in places is characterized by lucidity of statement,
forcefulness of expression, and even by brilliancy; but too often the
detail which mars his discussions is dry and prolix.” James Wilford
Garner.

+ – Dial. 41: 31. Jl. 16, ’06. 1180w. (Review of v. 1 and 2.)
“Dr. Mackinnon has, we fear, somewhat fluctuating ideas as to
the exact scope of his theme. It is the result of much careful study,
especially in French historical literature, and it is marked by a
sanity of judgment and a true love of freedom of which Dr.
Mackinnon desires to be the historian.”

+ + – Lond. Times. 5: 215. Je. 15, ’06. 1490w. (Review of v. 1 and


2.)
“The author is on the whole judicious and scholarly without
attaining real distinction. His book will not add to our sum of
knowledge and will not open new avenues of thought.”

+ – Nation. 82: 457. My. 31, ’06. 570w. (Review of v. 1 and 2.)
“They contain much of interest and value, but yet they fall short
of what we should wish the story of human liberty to be.”

+ – Sat. R. 101: 559. My. 5, ’06. 1490w. (Review of v. 1 and 2.)


“The serious defect of the work, however, is that it lacks
organization. The process of the development of liberty is not
clearly delineated. On the whole, the work despite its
shortcomings, must be pronounced a notable one.” George L.
Scherger.
+ + – Yale R. 15: 219. Ag. ’06. 500w. (Review of v. 1 and 2.)

McLaws, Emily Lafayette. Maid of Athens. †$1.50. Little.


A romance based upon Byron’s brief wooing of Lady Thyrza
Riga, the Maid of Athens, whom he immortalized in verse. Count
Riga gives his life for Greece, and Countess Riga rather than fall
into the hands of the Turks slays herself, while the child Thyrza
was sent to Constantinople and was brought up at court by a
renegade uncle. Here Byron found her, and was seriously minded
in his love-making, but a rival Turkish suitor brought disaster
through a forged letter. Lady Thyrza’s death, and later Byron’s
passing away at Messolonghi bring the story to a tragic close.

“Exceptionally well written and giving delightful glimpses of


Turkish and Greek life.” Amy C. Rich.

+ Arena. 36: 107. Jl. ’06. 160w.


– Ind. 60: 1488. Je. 21, ’06. 120w.
“It cannot be said that Miss McLaws reflects much of the Byronic
heat and light, while her Oriental atmosphere is distinctly of a kind
never made in the East.”

– N. Y. Times. 11: 151. Mr. 10, ’06. 310w.


– Outlook. 82: 810. Ap. 7, ’06. 40w.
“On the whole this is a better piece of work than either ‘Jezebel’
or ‘When the land was young.’”

+ World To-Day. 11: 766. Jl. ’06. 140w.

MacLean, Frank. Henry Moore, R. A. *$1.25. Scribner.


“This volume in “The makers of British art” series is a thoroly
workmanlike ‘life,’ narrating the details of Moore’s rather
uneventful career, describing and characterizing all his works of
importance and certainly in its estimate of those works, doing full
justice to the painter—comparatively few of whose pictures have
been seen on this side of the Atlantic. Numerous halftone blocks
help to give some faint idea of the man’s power and versatility in
depicting his chosen theme.... A final chapter touches briefly but
illuminatingly on the work of the few noteworthy painters of the
sea with whom Henry Moore was contemporary—John Brett,
Whistler, Claude Monet, Mesdag—and several lesser British
marine artists.” (Ind.)

“Doubtless will long remain the standard biography of England’s


foremost marine painter.”

+ + + Ind. 61: 817. O. 4, ’06. 150w.


“An interesting analysis is made of Moore’s work in marine
painting.”

+ + Int. Studio. 29: sup. 83. S. ’06. 320w.


“A sound and unpretentious piece of work which will supply all
the information that the general reader will care for about this
thoroughly competent if not quite great painter.”

+ + Nation. 82: 138. F. 15, ’06. 90w.


N. Y. Times. 11: 142. Mr. 10, ’06. 300w.

McMahan, Anna Benneson, ed. With Byron in Italy; being a


selection of the poems and letters of Lord Byron which have to do
with his life in Italy from 1816 to 1823. **$1.40. McClurg.
From the letters and poems of Byron, written during the most
mature and productive period of his life while under the spell of
the Italy that he loved and that loved him in return, the editor has
made wise selection and she has arranged the chosen parts
chronologically, and illustrated them with sixty reproductions from
photographs.

+ Dial. 41: 459. D. 16, ’06. 270w.


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