A copy of the book Little Women on cement pavers with gross growing up with text reading "Little Women"

Little Women

Little Women by Louisa May Alcott

The two books that I have read the most in my life:  Little Women and Walden

Louisa May Alcott wrote Little Women in 1868.  It centers on the 4 young March sisters:  Meg, Jo, Amy, and Beth.  Each of the sisters has a distinct personality.  Meg is the oldest, Jo is the writer and tomboy, Amy is the vain one, and Beth is a saint.  The sisters are guided by their mother, Marmee, and they strike up a friendship with the next-door-neighbor boy, Laurie. 

Little Women follows the March sisters as they grow up.  Each chapter is relatively short and usually features a moral lesson without being preachy (much like parables in the Bible). 

Transcendentalism

Now, I mentioned Walden.  What is the world does that have to do with Little Women?  Why I am so glad you asked (or if you didn’t I will tell you anyways).

Walden is authored by a man named Henry David Thoreau.  He also lived in Concord, Massachusetts, the same as Louisa May Alcott.  Additionally, Thoreau and Louisa May Alcott were friends.  They were both transcendentalists.  Transcendentalism is centered around the philosophy of simple, plain living with high thinking. 

When was the last time you received an advertisement that said, “Buy less!”  or “Stop buying things.  You are enough!”?  If you are like me, that has never happened. Yet every day, we are inundated to buy more concealer, a new pair of skinny jeans, a lavish vacation, or a gigantic mansion that will surely make us happy.  Transcendentalism is anti-consumerism.  It is a reminder that there is another way to live. 

Little Women is the more digestible version of Walden, but if you loved Little Women and enjoyed the morals therein, I highly, highly, highly suggest Walden (alright I suggest Walden to practically anybody). 

Jane Austen

The last time I read Little Women was before the internet existed.  When I picked this book up again for this reread, I am a completely different reader, and I have even more respect for Louisa May Alcott than before.  One of the things that I simply hate about Jane Austen is that her characters just seem to sit around and do nothing but complain about men and their highest desire is to be married (the female characters also do a bunch of silly things).

Louisa May Alcott is the opposite of Jane Austen, and I like her more for it.  Her female characters are strong.  At the beginning of the novel, both Meg and Jo are working jobs to support their family.  Jo dreams more of being a writer than getting married.  Marmee is more focused on raising wonderful people versus marrying off her daughters.    

One of the characters in Little Women refuses a marriage proposal.  When she says no, she says that she really means no.  In Jane Austen’s novels, her heroine receives multiple marriage proposals, and she says no and then yes.  This is very confusing to young readers.  Are you supposed to say no when you really mean yes?  I think Louisa May Alcott has the better idea of just saying no when you mean no.  As an introvert if I get even an inkling that the other person isn’t interested, I will never try again so if you mean yes, you should probably say yes and leave mind games to Jane Austen novels.

Overall, Little Women is a timeless classic, one that should be read over and over again.

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