
Louisa
May Alcott
Born: November 29, 1832, ( Germantown )
Works written: LITTLE WOMEN, Work: A Story of E.....
American author known for her children’s books, especially
the classic Little Women.
A daughter of the transcendentalist Bronson Alcott, Louisa
spent most of her life in Boston and Concord, Massachusetts, where she grew up
in the company of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Theodore Parker, and Henry David
Thoreau. Her education was largely under the direction of her father, for a
time at his innovative Temple School in Boston and, later, at home. Alcott
realized early that her father was too impractical to provide for his wife and
four daughters; after the failure of Fruitlands, a utopian community that he
had founded, Louisa Alcott’s lifelong concern for the welfare of her family
began. She taught briefly, worked as a domestic, and finally began to write.
Alcott produced potboilers at first and many of her
stories—notably those signed “A.M. Barnard”—were lurid and violent tales. The
latter works are unusual in their depictions of women as strong, self-reliant,
and imaginative. She volunteered as a nurse after the American Civil War began,
but she contracted typhoid from unsanitary hospital conditions and was sent
home. She was never completely well again. The publication of her letters in
book form, Hospital Sketches (1863), brought her the first taste of fame.
Alcott’s stories began to appear in The Atlantic Monthly,
and, because family needs were pressing, she wrote the autobiographical Little
Women (1868–69), which was an immediate success. Based on her recollections of
her own childhood, Little Women describes the domestic adventures of a New
England family of modest means but optimistic outlook. The book traces the
differing personalities and fortunes of four sisters as they emerge from
childhood and encounter the vicissitudes of employment, society, and marriage.
Little Women created a realistic but wholesome picture of family life with
which younger readers could easily identify. In 1869 Alcott was able to write
in her journal: “Paid up all the debts…thank the Lord!” She followed Little
Women’s success with further domestic narratives drawn from her early
experiences: An Old-Fashioned Girl (1870); Aunt Jo’s Scrap Bag, 6 vol.
(1872–82); Little Men (1871); Eight Cousins (1875); Rose in Bloom (1876); and
Jo’s Boys (1886).
n tour in 1870 and a few briefer trips to New York, she
spent the last two decades of her life in Boston and Concord, caring for her
mother, who died in 1877 after a lengthy illness, and her increasingly helpless
father. Late in life she adopted her namesake, Louisa May Nieriker, daughter of
her late sister, May. Her own health, never robust, also declined, and she died
in Boston two days after her father’s death.
Died: March 6, 1888, Boston, Massachusetts
Louisa May Alcott died of a stroke in 1888. Her health had been flagging for decades prior, however, and she wrote in her journal that she frequently suffered from exhaustion, headaches, nerve issues, and digestive pain. Some modern researchers have found her ailments later in life symptomatic of lupus.


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