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9789353767341 669212bc06fe4b0024a423c0 Little Women & Good Wives https://www.midlandbookshop.com/s/607fe93d7eafcac1f2c73ea4/669212bd06fe4b0024a423c9/81kzgouf5ll-_sy425_.jpg
I am not afraid of storms, for I am learning how to sail my ship. American writer Louisa May Alcott gave the world one of the most beloved classics on the joys and sorrows and the journey of growing up, on sisterhood, family, love and life. A novel in two volumes, Little Women & Good Wives traces the life of the four March sisters, of vastly contrasting characters, being raised by their loving mother, Marmee, in a small New England town while their father serves in the American Civil War. The eldest, Meg, is beautiful and aspires to be a lady; Jo, is fifteen, stubborn, willful and wants to write books; the thirteen-year-old Beth is kind, shy and enjoys music; and Amy, the youngest, is a romantic and a little spoiled. Alcott weaves an enjoyable and lovable story that surrounds their domestic life, their adventures and misadventures, their ambitions and romances, and as they grow up, the hardships and troubles that come in the way of their happiness.
 

About the Author

Louisa May aLcott (1832–1888) was a beloved American novelist, short story writer and poet. Her best-known works include the novels Little Women (1868), Good Wives (1869), and Little Men (1871). The daughter of the transcendentalist Bronson Alcott, Alcott spent most of her life in Boston and Concord, Massachusetts, USA. She volunteered as a nurse when the American Civil War broke out, but was sent back home when she fell severely ill. With the publication of her letters in book form, Hospital Sketches (1863), she earned a reputation as a writer of promise. Alcott’s stories began to appear in The Atlantic Monthly (The Atlantic), and when her family was grappling with financial distress, she wrote the autobiographical Little Women which became an instant success. Based on her memories of her own childhood, this novel paints a vivid and engrossing picture of the domestic affairs of a New England family of modest means.
9789353767341
in stockINR 316
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Little Women & Good Wives

Little Women & Good Wives

ISBN: 9789353767341
₹316
₹395   (20% OFF)



Details
  • ISBN: 9789353767341
  • Author: Louisa May Alcott
  • Publisher: Om Books
  • Pages: 476
  • Format: Paperback
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Book Description

I am not afraid of storms, for I am learning how to sail my ship. American writer Louisa May Alcott gave the world one of the most beloved classics on the joys and sorrows and the journey of growing up, on sisterhood, family, love and life. A novel in two volumes, Little Women & Good Wives traces the life of the four March sisters, of vastly contrasting characters, being raised by their loving mother, Marmee, in a small New England town while their father serves in the American Civil War. The eldest, Meg, is beautiful and aspires to be a lady; Jo, is fifteen, stubborn, willful and wants to write books; the thirteen-year-old Beth is kind, shy and enjoys music; and Amy, the youngest, is a romantic and a little spoiled. Alcott weaves an enjoyable and lovable story that surrounds their domestic life, their adventures and misadventures, their ambitions and romances, and as they grow up, the hardships and troubles that come in the way of their happiness.
 

About the Author

Louisa May aLcott (1832–1888) was a beloved American novelist, short story writer and poet. Her best-known works include the novels Little Women (1868), Good Wives (1869), and Little Men (1871). The daughter of the transcendentalist Bronson Alcott, Alcott spent most of her life in Boston and Concord, Massachusetts, USA. She volunteered as a nurse when the American Civil War broke out, but was sent back home when she fell severely ill. With the publication of her letters in book form, Hospital Sketches (1863), she earned a reputation as a writer of promise. Alcott’s stories began to appear in The Atlantic Monthly (The Atlantic), and when her family was grappling with financial distress, she wrote the autobiographical Little Women which became an instant success. Based on her memories of her own childhood, this novel paints a vivid and engrossing picture of the domestic affairs of a New England family of modest means.

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