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Louisa May Alcott Biography

Writer

Louisa May Alcott wrote Little Women, a novel for young readers that's been popular since its appearance in 1868. Born in Pennsylvania, she's most closely associated with Boston and Concord, Massachusetts, where she grew up with the likes of Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau, associates of her father, Transcendentalist philosopher (Amos) Bronson Alcott. A childhood of financial insecurity apparently made Louisa determined to be a success. She had a literary reputation after the 1863 publication of her experiences as a Civil War nurse (Hospital Sketches), but she made money in the 1860s writing potboilers and publishing them anonymously or pseudonymously. Her market-savvy Little Women was based on her own experiences growing up (she's associated with the character Jo) and cemented her fame and fortune. Her other works include Good Wives (1869), Little Men (1871), Rose in Bloom (1876) and Jo's Boys (1886).

Blog posts mentioning Louisa May Alcott:

Four Good Links

Home of the Alcotts

Includes family biographies

Louisa May Alcott

Background on her life and work, from a documentary film

Louisa May Alcott

Background and bibliography

Louisa May Alcott

Background and related links for book lovers

Vital Stats

Birth

29 November 1832

Birthplace

Germantown, Pennsylvania

Death

6 March 1888
(age 55)

Best Known As

The author of Little Women