The Promise of Destiny: Children and Women in the Short Stories of Louisa May Alcott
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
28th July 1983
United States
Tertiary Education
Fiction
Age groups: children
Literary studies: fiction, novelists and prose writers
Literary studies: c 1800 to c 1900
Gender studies: women and girls
305.23
Hardback
166
This critique of Louisa May Alcott's story collection, Aunt Jo's Scrap Bag, is the only book-length study of Alcott's shorter works. ... The study is most valuable as an analysis of women's roles, female destiny in the affirmation of the family, the duty of the maiden aunt, and the noble ends for the single woman--all through the 60 stories in the Scrap Bag. Louisa May Alcott's title carries metaphorical value: in the patchwork, women do the best they can with the available pieces. A necessary purchase for the tradition of female writers. Notes, bibliography, and index are valuable. Readable style.-Choice
"This critique of Louisa May Alcott's story collection, Aunt Jo's Scrap Bag, is the only book-length study of Alcott's shorter works. ... The study is most valuable as an analysis of women's roles, female destiny in the affirmation of the family, the duty of the maiden aunt, and the noble ends for the single woman--all through the 60 stories in the Scrap Bag. Louisa May Alcott's title carries metaphorical value: in the patchwork, women do the best they can with the available pieces. A necessary purchase for the tradition of female writers. Notes, bibliography, and index are valuable. Readable style."-Choice
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