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Louisa May Alcott, the author of "Little Women," may have written more works than readers were aware of, thanks to a scholar who made an interesting discovery. Primary Menu Sections.
Louisa May Alcott was known to publish under various names throughout her writing career, but this discovery marks the first time any new pseudonym has been linked to Alcott since the 1940s.
Louisa May Alcott took part in a 19th-century literary culture of anonymity and guessing games. Universal History Archive/Universal Images Group via Getty Images.
A selection of Louisa May Alcott books are archived at the American Antiquarian Society, a national research library of pre-20th century American history and culture, Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2024, in ...
Bold, brash, and unconventional–Jo March and Louisa May Alcott were one and the same. An aspiring author with a hot temper, the heroine of Little Women was admittedly modeled after Louisa.Both ...
Louisa May Alcott inspired generations of girls with her own portrait in “Little Women” as rowdy, moody Jo March, who wished she had been born a boy, loved to run Alcott was 'Jo,' but there ...
Louisa May Alcott took inspiration from her childhood memories and family members, basing Little Women‘s Meg on her oldest sister, Anna (an actress, who met her own “John Brooke”, John ...
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