The surprise, at least for someone moderately familiar with Robert W. Service, in this collection of his five volumes of verse, is the last, Ballads of a Bohemian. That collection is unlike much of his other poems and most are introduced with prose telling of his life in Paris beginning in 1914. It also spans his entry in the First World War as an ambulance driver. I was surprised to discover that this last volume in the collection contains many war poems that are not included in Rhymes of a Red Cross Man (my favorite amongst his books). If all you know of Service is "The Cremation of Sam McGee," and perhaps "The Men That Don't Fit In," and if those brought you to this volume, then you will be rewarded for the effort.