Chicago Tribune
This book contains all the reader could possibly wish to know about Louisa May Alcott. It will stand for a long time-perhaps permanently-as the authoritative book in its field.
Book Description
First published in 1950, this biography of Louisa May Alcott (1832-1888) remains the standard work on the beloved American writer. Madeleine B. Stern, one of the world's leading Alcott scholars, shows how the breadth of Alcott's work, ranging from Little Women to sensational thrillers and war stories, serves as a reflection of a fascinating and complicated life dotted with poverty and riches alike, hard menial work, physical suffering relieved by opiates, and the acclaim of literary success.
Louisa May Alcott: A Biography FROM THE PUBLISHER
First published in 1950, Madeleine B. Stern's biography remains the standard work on Louisa May Alcott; in 1995 Alcott scholar Barbara Sicherman wrote that this is still "the classic biography." Stern shows how the breadth of Alcott's work, ranging from Little Women to sensational thrillers and war stories, serves as a reflection of a life dotted with poverty and riches alike, hard menial work (Alcott was a domestic servant and a nurse in the Civil War), physical suffering relieved by opiates, and the acclaim of literary success. As Stern recounts in her new Introduction, Alcott's fascinating and complicated life has been reinterpreted as new stories have been published. This edition includes an updated bibliography.
FROM THE CRITICS
Booknews
Alcott (1832-1888), beloved for , led a complicated life, which is recounted here in this definitive biography. This publication is a paper edition reprint of a 1996 publication (Random House) which was itself a reprint (with an introduction) of the 1950 work published by U. of Oklahoma Press. Stern is a leading Alcott scholar. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)