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Wednesday, February 22, 2017

Louisa May’s Battle: How the Civil War Led to Little Women, by Kathleen Krull, illustrated by Carlyn Beccia -- Day 34



Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women has been loved by generation upon generation of readers. The March family’s life in New England during the Civil War is unadorned but dignified. Meg, Jo, Beth and Amy are distinctive personalities, engaging in all the dreams, despair, pranks and laughter that betide most siblings. The girls are loyal to each other and to their parents, becoming essential to the welfare of the family when their father goes off to serve as a chaplain in the war. What many readers of this classic may not know is that author Louisa May Alcott took inspiration for her classic novel from her personal experience during the Civil War. Driven by her concern about the realities and import of the conflict, Alcott traveled to Washington, D.C., to serve as a nurse.  While inexperienced, she resolutely cared for sick and wounded soldiers, writing letters home that captured her observations and feelings. Alcott contracted typhoid in the hospital and had to return to her family. The reception of her first published work  Hospital Sketches, based on her war letters encouraged her to introduce a vivid realism to her future writing. She set Little Women during the war and was clearly able to understand the hardships of those participating on the front as well as those keeping home fires burning. Kathleen Krull’s biographical picture book Louisa May’s Battle: How the Civil War Led to Little Women, illustrated by Carlyn Beccia, recounts this intriguing literary history for young readers. Ages 6 up.


Related resources may be found at: TeachingBooks.net