From Publishers Weekly
Prepared by the editors of Alcott's letters and recently discovered thrillers, this volume deepens appreciation for the industrious author. The journals open in 1843, when "LMA" was 11, and continue through March 1888, four days before her death at age 56. One grows to feel close to the Alcotts of Concord, Mass.--like the Marches of Little Women , kept poor by the father's visionary schemes. As a girl, Louisa became the chief supporter of her parents and siblings, working at menial jobs, but always writing (and prudently tailoring stories and poems to specific markets). There is no lack of love in the author's references to her dependents, but she sometimes confessed to envying the security that her labor gave them. Alcott's journals offer a literate, poignant, often humorous portrait of a singular woman. Photos not seen by PW.
Copyright 1989 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Library Journal
The editors of this text have collected diaries, journals, and year-end "Notes and Memoranda" and from them assembled a single continuous chronological record of Alcott's life from her first entry in 1843 to the end of her life in 1888. For the most part, the entries are the sketchy unartistic fare that comprise diary entries (even those of gifted writers), but there are moments both touching and memorable--a recollection of a weary Bronson Alcott returning home from a disastrous lecture tour and anecdotes of the wounded in a Union hospital. Notes providing numerous identifications and directing the reader to sources for further study follow the entries for each year. Most useful to the student interested in circumstances of composition since it evidences Alcott's state of mind at various times and her attitudes toward major events, but not essential.
- Frank Pisano, Pennsylvania State Univ., University ParkCopyright 1989 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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