This is a collection of three novellas: *The Misadventures of John Nicholson*, *The Body Snatcher*, and *The Story of a Lie*. *Misadventures* seems to have been influenced by Stevenson's own life in that it involves a trip from Edinburgh to San Francisco and back again. Stevenson, always terse, does not belabor the trips themselves but only the mishaps that keep plaguing poor John Nicholson. What makes this story line work is that we always get an interpretation of events from Nicholson's rationalizing mind--it's not "stealing," it's "borrowing," for example. This allows this very human fellow to keep an aura of innocence about him and the reader longs for his vindication. *The Body Snatcher* is more macabre and concerns the practice of grave robbing in order to provide the medical school with cadavers for training in anatomy, but it focuses, again, on the conscience of one of the university's "student assistants, the power of peer pressure, and the darkness of the practice. *The Story of a Lie* may be the weakest of the three and ends, as the chapter title says, with a "deus ex machina" that is a bit too pat. All in all, this is a great collection an a fast read.