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Louisa May Alcott: Little women (1980, Franklin Library)

515 pages

Langue : English

Publié 3 décembre 1980 par Franklin Library.

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Aucune note (1 critique)

Chronicles the joys and troubles of the four March sisters as they grow into young women in mid-nineteenth-century New England.

118 éditions

a publié une critique de Little Women (Little Women, #1) par Louisa May Alcott (Little Women, #1)

Didn't hit for me

Aucune note

So. I didn't like this book very much, but this is a bit of an annoying review to write. The reasons why I don't like this book are not really something I can fault the author, as they're pretty much to be expected for a book written in this time period.

Shortly put, like many older examples of children's lit, I find Little Women to be overly didactic and twee, with the added difficulty of disagreeing with some of the moral lessons it tries to teach.

I can see the value it must have had in its time, as well as to some readers, in portraying girls with interesting inner lives and conflicts, who did not always entirely fit the gender norms. It was, in that sense, an interesting bit of insight in the time period. But as an adult modern reader I couldn't really connect with it.

Sujets

  • March family (Fictitious characters) -- Juvenile fiction
  • Family -- New England -- Juvenile fiction
  • Sisters -- New England -- Juvenile fiction
  • Family life -- New England -- Fiction
  • Sisters -- Fiction
  • New England -- Juvenile fiction
  • New England -- History -- 19th century -- Fiction