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Louisa May Alcott was born in Germantown, Pennsylvania on
November 29, 1832. As a child she was very adventurous,
hated to be bored, and always wanted to play with the boys
(which was not acceptable at the time). She was taught
mostly at home by her father. Her writing talent was
noticeable at an early age and her parents encouraged her to
write, especially in her diary. As a teenager she wrote
several plays, poems, and short stories.
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In 1834 the Alcott family moved to Massachusetts
finally settling in the Orchard House in Concord,
Massachusetts. There they became neighbors with the
families of other writers such as Ralph Waldo
Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, and Nathaniel
Hawthorne.
To help support her family, Alcott worked as a
teacher, seamstress, and servant.
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Her varied work experiences provided her with material for
her novels. Hospital Sketches, published in 1863, was a
fictional account of Alcott's six months as a volunteer
nurse in a military hospital during the Civil War. The book
was such a success that Alcott believed she should write
novels depicting real life. Little Women (1868), her most
popular novel, was about the life of the March family and
she used members of her own family as characters. Little Men
(1871) continues the story of the March family and Jo's Boys
(1886) depicts the careers and marriages of the March
sisters' children and friends.
In addition to novels, Alcott wrote poems and essays that
were about her own life. "Thoreau's Flute" told of the time
she spent at Walden Pond and "Transcendental Wild Oats" was
a humorous account of her father's attempt to establish a
perfect community at Fruitlands. Alcott also wrote many
thriller stories for magazines, but she did not use her real
name for those.
Alcott, who never married, supported women's rights and
the women in her stories have careers other than that of
mother and homemaker. Louisa May Alcott died on March 6,
1888.
http://www.louisamayalcott.org/
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