
A prolific author of books for American girls, Louisa May Alcott is best
remembered for Little Women, one of the 270 published works by the
Pennsylvania-born woman. This endearing novel captured forever the period's
ideals and values of middle class domestic life. The book has appeared
continuously in print since its first serial publication in 1868-70.
The popular novel drew largely upon her personal experiences. The second of four
daughters, Alcott began her writing to support her perpetually impoverished
family. Her strong and loving mother was a significant force in her life. "I
think she is a very brave, good woman," Alcott wrote of her mother. "And my
dream is to have a lovely, quiet home for her, with no debts or troubles to
burden her."
Beginning with the publication of the poem "Sunlight" under a pseudonym in 1851,
Alcott poured forth a variety of thrillers, poems, potboilers and an occasional
juvenile tale. In 1867, she became editor of a children's magazine, Merry's
Museum. At the urging of her publisher there, Alcott undertook the writing of
Little Women. The novel, like her other works, was formed largely in her mind
before she took pen to paper. The entire novel was written in two six-weeks
periods.
In 1879, Alcott was the first woman to register in Concord when Massachusetts
gave women school, tax and bond suffrage. Eventually she persuaded her publisher
to publish Harriett Hanson Robinson's Massachusetts in the Woman Suffrage
Movement in 1881. In her final novel, Jo's Boys (1886), Alcott made arguments
for women's rights and other reforms. She said, "I can remember when
anti-slavery was in just the same state that suffrage is now, and take more
pride in the very small help we Alcotts could give than in all the books I ever
wrote..."
Additional Resources:
Work: A Story of Experience. With a new introduction by Elizabeth
Hardwick. New York: Arno Press, 1977 [1873]. NOTES: Part of the "Rediscovered
fiction by American women series." Reprint of the 1st edition, published by
Roberts, Boston. Little Women. Boston: J. Redpath, 1868.
Hospital Sketches. Boston: J. Redpath, 1863.
Little Men. Boston: J. Redpath, 1871.
Flower Fables. George W. Briggs & Co., 1855. (CAmbridge, MA: Metcalf and
Company, Stereotypers and Printers).
Papers 1820-1888, 150 items. Harvard College Library, the Houghton Library,
Manuscript Department. Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Alcott Family Papers and Collection, 1830-1942. 10 linear ft. Louisa May Alcott
Memorial Association. Concord, Massachusetts.
Papers 1856-1918, ca. 2 ft. (311 items). University of Virginia, Alderman
Library, Special Collections. Charlottesville, Virginia.