PEOPLE IN AMERICA - Louisa May Alcott(在线收听

PEOPLE IN AMERICA -September 1, 2002: Louisa May Alcott

By Shelley Gollust


VOICE 1:
I'm Steve Ember
VOICE 2:

 

And I'm Shirley Griffith with the VOA Special English program, People in America. Every
week we tell about a person important in the history of the United States. Today we tell about
Louisa May Alcott. She wrote one of America's best loved children's books.

VOICE 1:

In eighteen-sixty-eight, an American publisher asked a struggling young writer to write a

book for girls. At first, the writer, Louisa May Alcott, was not sure she wanted to do it. She

said she never liked girls. And she never knew many, except her sisters. She thought her
family's activities and experiences might be interesting to others. But, she said, probably not.

VOICE 2:

Alcott decided to write the book anyway. She told about her experiences growing up in the northeastern United
States during the middle of the nineteenth century. Her book proved to be more than interesting. "Little Women"
became one of the most popular children's books in American literature. It has been published in more than fifty
languages.

((MUSIC))

VOICE 1:

Louisa May Alcott was born in Pennsylvania in eighteen-thirty-two. She was the second of four daughters. She
had one older sister, Anna. And two younger sisters, ElizaBeth, called Beth, and may. Her parents were Bronson
and Abigail Alcott. Her father was an educator and social reformer.

The Alcotts later settled in Concord, Massachusetts. Several great American writers were friends of the family.
They included Ralph Waldo Emerson, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Henry David Thoreau. Mister Alcott provided
the girls' education. He taught them many subjects. He also made them write about their personal thoughts and
experiences.

VOICE 2:

The Alcotts did not have much money. Louisa worked to help support her family. She tried teaching, sewing, and
taking care of children. She did not like any of these Jobs.

Louisa thought of herself as a writer. At the age of sixteen, she wrote her first book. It was called flower fables.
She decided to sell what she wrote. She wrote many kinds of poems, stories, and plays. Her stories were exciting,
but unrealistic. She sold them to newspapers and magazines for small amounts of money.

VOICE 1:

In eighteen-sixty-two, during the American civil war, Louisa May Alcott went to Washington, D-C. She served
as a nurse in a military hospital. She cared for sick and wounded soldiers. She wrote letters to her family about
her experiences. She included these letters in a book that was published the next year. Critics praised it but it did
not bring her much money. And, working in the hospital damaged her health.


VOICE 2:

In eighteen-sixty-five she visited Europe as a helper to an older woman. Alcott hoped to re-gain her health. She
spent a long time away from her family. Her health did not improve. But she thought about her writing. When she
returned, she agreed to her publisher's request that she write a book for girls based on the life she knew.

"Little Women" was published in eighteen-sixty-eight. The book was immediately popular with people of all
ages. It brought Alcott fame and a lot of money. She continued writing other popular books for young people.
These included an old-fashioned girl, little men, and eight cousins.

((MUSIC))

VOICE 1:

Louisa May Alcott wrote books for adults, as well as children. She published these under another name -- A.M.
Barnard. These books were published before "Little Women" made her famous. They were very different from
her children's stories. They were about love, power, and unhappiness. They have been published again in the
United States.

One book is called "Behind a Mask: the Unknown thrillers of Louisa May Alcott." The book includes four
mystery stories. Another is called the lost stories of Louisa May Alcott. These stories are about love, betrayal,
and illegal drugs.

VOICE 2:

Alcott wrote a story called "A Long Fatal Love Chase." It is about an independent young woman. She marries an
older man who already has a wife. She flees from him. He follows her throughout Europe. The book tells of
insanity, violence, and death. Louisa May Alcott tried to get the book published in eighteen-sixty-six. The
publisher rejected it. He said it was too shocking.

A man who collected Alcott materials found the unpublished story in a bookstore in New York City. He bought it
for about fifty-thousand dollars a few years ago. He reportedly sold it to a major American publisher for about
one-million dollars.

VOICE 1:

Louisa May Alcott wrote many exciting stories about love. Yet she never married. She continued to support her
family during the last years of her life. In fact, she cared for the young daughter of her sister may who died in
eighteen-seventy-nine.

Alcott was involved in the movements to end slavery and to gain voting rights for women. She wrote that "I ...
take more pride in the very small help we Alcotts could give than in all the books I ever wrote." Louisa May
Alcott died in eighteen-eighty-eight.

((MUSIC))

VOICE 2:

Louisa May Alcott's most famous book, "Little Women", tells the story of the March family of Concord,
Massachusetts. The story begins during the American civil war in the eighteen-sixties. Mr. March is away from
home. He is with the troops of the Union Army. He is a religious worker. Mister March is raising her four
daughters by herself.

The March family is very close. They do many things together. They do not have much money. They suffer
shortages caused by the war. Yet they share what they have with people who are in need.

VOICE 1:

The four daughters are Meg, Jo, Beth, and Amy. They are strong, brave, and loving. Jo is the most important
person in the book. She is smart. She has a good imagination. She writes stories. And she creates plays that the


sisters perform together.
Jo also is independent. She chooses a non-traditional life. She goes to New York to become a writer. There she


meets an older man, a professor. She returns home to care for her parents. She writes stories that become very
popular. Later, Jo marries the professor. Together, they establish a school.
((MUSIC)
)
VOICE 2:
The March family in "Little Women" is very much like Louisa May Alcott's family. Her sisters are like the sisters


in the book. And the leading person, Jo, is like Louisa. Jo must work to support her family, just as Louisa had to
do. One of Jo's jobs is to help a family member, an old woman called aunt March. Jo does not really like aunt
March. But she loves the old woman's house, especially the large library with hundreds of books. This is how
Alcott writes about this place:

VOICE 1:
"The dim, dusty room ... the cozy chairs, the globes, and, best of all, the wilderness of books in which she could
wander where she liked, made the library a region of bliss to her. The moment Aunt March took her nap, or was


busy with company, Jo hurried to this quiet space, and, curling herself up in the easy chair, devoured poetry,
romance, history, travels, and pictures, like a regular bookworm.
"
All of these wonderful books put great ideas into Jo's head. Jo wanted to do something very wonderful, Alcott


writes. "What it was she had no idea as yet, but left it for time to tell her.
"
VOICE 2:
Jo's beloved sister Beth dies young, as Alcott's own sister Beth did. Jo is very unhappy. Her mother tells her to


write because that always made her happy. Jo writes a story "that went straight to the hearts of those who read it.
"


Jo can not understand how her simple little story became so popular.
Her father explains, "there is truth in it, Jo, that's the secret; ... You have found your style at last. You wrote with
no thought of fame or money, and put your heart into it ... ; You have had the bitter, now comes the sweet.
"


VOICE 1:
Louisa May Alcott's book, ""Little Women"," is still extremely popular. Women who read the book when they


were young often give it to their daughters. Some famous American women even claim they decided to become
writers after reading how Jo March became a writer in "Little Women"
.
(Theme)
VOICE 2:
This Special English program was written by Shelley Gollust. It was produced by Paul Thompson. I'm Shirley


Griffith.
VOICE 1:
And I'm Steve Ember. Join us again next week for another People in America program on the Voice of America.

 

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