I bought this edition thinking my adult son would want it for his collection on behalf of his children of the Scribner's Classics. I'd never read it. Turns out he already has it. I read it with respect and pleasure, finding in it, along with the work of Kingsley's contemporary Captain Frederick Maryatt, a progenitor of later historical-adventure-romances e.g. Stevenson, R.P Blackmore, Sabatini in particular, Patrick O' Brien, J. Meade Falkner, C.S. Forester, and lesser-known books like John Inglesant, The Cloister and the Hearth, Martin Hyde the Duke's Messenger and Green Mansions (the last-named I've read only in the Classics Illustrated comic). It's a good Odyssey. I got tired of the rabid anti-Catholic rants, which I hope reflected more what Kingsley imagined protestants in the late 16th C to feel than what he himself as a clergyman and Oxonian believed. If you like the writers and books named above, this is a fun discovery. Oddly, the N.C. Wyeth illustrations in this edition (pub ca 1927) are not as vivid as most NC Wyeth. I don't know if it's reproduction artifact or if Wyeth didn't put as much into them as, say Treasure Island..