wwlmad (what would louisa may alcott do?)
Publishing a book is a saga, though I’d never presume to think it’s as exciting as the lives of the women writers I’m writing about (how very meta). I just received a very incisive and encouraging revision letter from my editor at HarperCollins and as I go through the manuscript, adding layers and clarifying, I am reminded that the ability and opportunity to revise is in and of itself a blessing.
Think I’m being cheesy? Just think of Louisa May Alcott, tart author of Little Women and other beloved girls’ classics, and the hurried way in which she had to write her books. She was so busy sewing, going out as a servant, and caring for her impoverished family that she never had much time for revision. In a way, though, much of her literary work was revision: editing out (sometimes ineffectively) her frustration over her ongoing poverty, her family’s crushing expectations, and her never-met ambitions. Writing is rewriting, and Louy spent much time rewriting herself into something more socially acceptable than the clumsy, sarcastic, workaholic who was just as compelling as any of her heroines.
…[Jo] read several liberal offers from budding magazines for her to edit them gratis; one long letter from a young girl inconsolable because her favourite hero died, and ‘would dear Mrs Bhaer rewrite the tale, and make it end good?’ another from an irate boy denied an autograph, who darkly foretold financial ruin and loss of favour if she did not send him and all other fellows who asked autographs, photographs, and auto-biographical sketches; a minister wished to know her religion; and an undecided maiden asked which of her two lovers she should marry. These samples will suffice to show a few of the claims made on a busy woman’s time, and make my readers pardon Mrs Jo if she did not carefully reply to all.
- Louisa May Alcott, Jo’s Boys
Think I’m giving an awful lot of screen space to Miss Alcott these days? Yup. I’ll admit it: my interest in the woman who gave us Jo March has become somewhat of an obsession. I’ll stop now lest I expose too much of my nerdiness up front.





If I were to protest and say that one should never hide her nerdiness, that might reveal more than *I* would rather! But I have just discovered your blog and think your forthcoming book sounds right up my proverbial alley: I’ll definitely be adding it to my list.
I haven’t read Alcott’s later Jo books, but I did make time for Eight Cousins and Rose in Bloom last year and was struck by their feminist spirit. I think, with just a little more reading experience of her work, it would be a quick trip to obsession with Miss Alcott for me as well!
Thanks, BIP! I’m just loving all of these introductions to the literate, book-obsessed people I neglected while writing the book.
Have you read An Old-Fashioned Girl?
No, I haven’t. Are you about to tell me that I should, and that that is what could spark my own future obsessiveness about LMA? I’m nervous, but compelled to ask all the same…