Louisa May Alcott
Louisa May Alcott (1832 - 1888) was raised in a loving home in Massachusetts. Her father was noted Transcendentalist Bronson Alcott and welcomed guests such as Theodore Parker, Henry David Thoreau, and Ralph Waldo Emmerson to their home. When Fruitland, her father's utopian society failed, Alcott realized she would need to focus on practical skills to support her family. She and her three sisters were close and often performed plays written by Alcott. She worked variously as a teacher, a nurse, and a domestic servant before she achieved success with her writing. She contracted typhoid from a hospital which she volunteered at during the civil war and was never completely well again. She never married and turned her energies to the temperance movement and early feminist causes. In fact, she was the first woman to register to vote in Concord, MA.
Alcott published a collection of letters based on her experiences, "Hospital Sketches" (1863), and began publishing short stories for the "Atlantic Monthly." Her first and most famous novel, "Little Women" (originally two volumes "Meg, Jo, Beth, and Amy" (1868) and "Goodwives" (1869)) was an autobiographical account of her happy childhood of modest means. Jo March was the first juvenile heroine presented as a real person, rather than the idealized child of popular literature. She continued her tales of the March sisters with "Jo's Boys" (1886), "Little Men" (1871), and "Aunt Jo's Scrap Bag," 6 vol. (1872-82). Other popular works include "Eight Cousins" (1875), and its sequel "Rose in Bloom" (1876) and "Transcendental Wild Oats" (1873) an autobiographical tale of life on the commune. Various collections of "blood and thunder" short stories, detective novellas, and literary thrillers have been published, and posthumously, collections of Gothic tales, "Behind a Mask" (1975), "Plots and Counterplots" (1976) and the novel, "A Long Fatal Love Chase" (1995).
"I asked for bread, and I got a stone in the shape of a pedestal." Louisa May Alcott
"Resolve to take fate by the throat and shake a living out of her." Louisa May Alcott
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This article was written by Knowledgerush staff or contributed by users. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.
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Louisa May Alcott (November 29, 1832 - March 6, 1888) was an American novelist, best known for the novel Little Women (1868).
She was the daughter of Amos Bronson Alcott and Abigail May, and though of New England parentage and residence, was born in Germantown, now part of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. She began work at an early age as an occasional teacher, seamstress, governess, and writer — her first book was Flower Fables (1854), tales originally written for Ellen Emerson, daughter of Ralph Waldo Emerson. In 1860 she began writing for the Atlantic Monthly, and she was nurse in the Union Hospital at Georgetown, D.C., for six weeks in 1862-1863. Her letters home, revised and published in the Commonwealth and collected as Hospital Sketches (1863, republished with additions in 1869), displayed keen power of observation and record with a healthy dose of the humor of retrospection, and garnered her the first critical recognition. Despite its uncertainty of method and of touch, Moods, a novel (1864), also showed considerable promise.
A lesser-known part of her work are the passionate, fiery novels and stories she wrote, usually under the pseudonym A. M. Barnard. These works, such as A Long Fatal Love Chase and Pauline's Passion and Punishment, are of the type referred to in Little Women as "dangerous for little minds" and were called "potboilers" or "blood-and-thunder tales" by Victorians. Their protagonists are willful and relentless in their pursuit of their own aims, which often include revenge on those who have humiliated or thwarted them. These well-written works with an uncommon point of view achieved immediate commercial success and are highly readable today.
She also produced moralistic and wholesome stories for children, and, with the exceptions of the semi-autobiographical tale Work (1873), and the anonymous novelette A Modern Mephistopheles (1877), which attracted suspicion that it was authored by Julian Hawthorne, she did not return to creating works for adults.
Her overwhelming success dated from the appearance of the first part of Little Women: or Meg, Jo, Beth and Amy (1868), in which, with unfailing humour, freshness and realism, she put into story form many of the sayings and doings of herself and sisters. Little Men (1871) similarly treated the character and ways of her nephews who lived with her at Orchard House in Concord, Massachusetts, in which Alcott's industry had now established her parents and other members of the Alcott family. Jo's Boys (1886) completed the "March Family Saga." Most of her later volumes, An Old-Fashioned Girl (1870), Aunt Jo's Scrap Bag (6 vols., 1871-1879), Rose in Bloom (1876), and others, followed in the line of Little Women, of which the author's large and loyal public never wearied.
Her natural love of labor, her wide-reaching generosity, her quick perception, and her fondness for sharing with her many readers that cheery humor that radiated from her personality and her books, led her to continue to produce stories despite worsening health. At last she succumbed to the lingering aftereffects of mercury poisoning, contracted during her Civil War service, dying in Boston on March 6, 1888, two days after visiting her father on his deathbed.
Alcott's early education had included lessons from the naturalist Henry David Thoreau but had chiefly been in the hands of her father, and in her girlhood and early womanhood she had fully shared the trials and poverty incident to the life of a peripatetic idealist.
In a newspaper sketch entitled "Transcendental Wild Oats", afterwards reprinted in the volume Silver Pitchers (1876), she narrated, with a delicate wit and humour, the experiences of her family during an experiment towards Utopian "plain living and high thinking" at "Fruitlands" in the town of Harvard, Massachusetts in 1843.
The story of her life and career was initially competently told in Ednah D. Cheney's Louisa May Alcott: Her Life, Letters and Journals (Boston, 1889) and then in Madeleine B. Stern's seminal biography Louisa May Alcott (University of Oklahoma Press, 1950).
External Links
Referenced By
1832 | 1832 in literature | 1868 in literature | 1869 in literature | 1870 in literature | 1871 in literature | 1873 in literature | 1875 in literature | 1876 in literature | 1877 in literature | 1879 in literature | 1886 in literature | 1888 | 1888 in literature | 29 November | 29th November | 6 March | 6th March | A. M. Barnard | Abba May Alcott | Abigail May Alcott | Abigail May Alcott Nieriker | Academy Award for Writing Adapted Screenplay | Academy Awards/Writing Screenplay Adaptation | Amos Bronson Alcott | Autobiographical novel | Beth | Charles Ives | Children's Literature | Children's author | Children's book | Children's books | Children's fiction | Children's novelists | Children's story | Children's writer | Childrens author | Concord, Massachusetts | Daniel Chester French | Education reform | Famous Unitarian Universalists | Gilded Generation | Historic houses in Massachusetts | List of Unitarian Universalists | List of authors by name: A | List of books by title: L | List of children's literature authors | List of historic houses in Massachusetts | List of novelists | List of novelists by country: United States | List of novelists by nationality | List of novelists from the United States | List of people by name: Al | List of people on stamps of the United States | List of years in literature | Little Women | March 6 | March 6th | May Alcott | May Alcott Nieriker | November 29 | November 29th | People on stamps of the United States | School reform | Theodore Parker | Thistledown
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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Louisa May Alcott".
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If you know facts or have questions about this author post them here.
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I'm an artist who is inspired by Louisa May Alcott's work. I've created a limited series block print of her portrait and would like to offer it to you. here is a link to see it:
http://www.thonian.com/detail.php?artwork=43
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who did louisa may alcott marry and how many kids did she have????
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I think that Louisa May Alcott would be a good karate teacher...as long as she wasn't afraid to get her hands dirty! Her writing is good, just not my style...and she shouldn't have made poor Bethy die. That's just not nice! ; )
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In answer to athleticangel708, louisa may alcott never married
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Thanks this site is great! I have to do a report on her. It is very useful. THANK YOU
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THANK YOU SO MUCH!!! It is a wonderful idea to have a site like this. This is the most useful webpage I have ever gotten info from! Kepp up the GREAT work!
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I Love LOUISA MAY ALCOTT!,bUT i HAVE TO DO A REALLY HARD REPORT ON HER , oh well,at least Ihave an interresting topic!!!!!!
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how many books/stories did Louisa May Alcott write?
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One of my students is doing a literary paper on "Marjorie's Three Gifts" by Alcott. She is having difficulty finding criticism or essays about the story. Do you have any references or sites she could use?
Thanks for your help.
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This site is helpful but how about what other people think about her.
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I will be the next Louisa!
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She sucks
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HI. Louisa's really cool in my opinion, I like her use of family values, if that makes sense. I think she was a very family oriented person, and deserves a place of prestige in the author's hall of fame. I apologize for the 2 previous comments. I left my computer unattended for a few minutes in a classroom full of apes.
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please help me when did lma start going to school please help write back soon i need this by tuesday night
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Hi! I'm looking for a book by LMA but I can't remember the name. It's the sequel of "An old-fashioned girl", or so I think, because I remember reading it ages ago and I do remember that it was about Polly and Fanny's marriages. Does anyone know?
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its hard to find things but ill find it on her
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I have, Life, Letters, and Journals 1889, by Louisa M. Alcott. It is also signed by her. Where might I find out the value of this book via internet
thanks for your help
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wow i cant believe i have to do a project on such a boring person. i hate this
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I am so sad that Anonymous feels LMAlcott is "boring" . You must be a BOY! My family and I visited her homestead, The Orchard , just yesterday, the same day Anonymous posted her/his comment, and I live in Connecticut and went to Concord specifically to see The Orchard home. Our tour guide made LMA and her family come alive with excitement about the wonderful lives they lived, caring so much and so strongly for each other. Mr and Mrs. Alcott were wonderfully modern parents for that time. They encouraged their children in their talents and independence -- most unheard of for a female living at that time in history. I hope as you work through your research you come to a different, more favorable opinion of her. Please post back when you finishe. Much good luck and good reading to you.
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its true i am a boy, but the more research i did on her i realized how much she had to go through in her life. when i posted that last post i was ignorant because i hadn't done any research on her but i admitt that i was wrong. sorry 3john4
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she is very intresting i am doing a book report on her and this web-site has been a big help.
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LMA is so not boring you must be stuiped if you think she is boring she is so inspiring i mean she stand up for what she believes in i am so excieted i get to do a book report on her i want to do the project this time.
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