Invincible Louisa – Case Study #236236264646
It’s a singularly exciting, overwhelming, and trying time these days. I find myself on quite the rollercoaster of ups and downs in terms of my day job, my writing, my relationships, and my own self-image.
Maybe it’s some kind of lunar phase or solar phenomenon (since everyone I know seems to be in upheaval), maybe it’s my age or something in the water. I’m certainly at sea, and it turns out that all I really know for sure is what I have known how to do since the beginning…read myself into comfort and some semblance of sanity.
These days that usually looks like a book by or about Louisa May Alcott, irascible and overworked, overwrought and feisty and cranky as can be. You wouldn’t know it to read Eight Cousins or Rose in Bloom, which are replete with moral lessons even when they show life’s trials (which usually involve things like struggling to be as good as you should be, or contracting a fever which is healed by a cousin’s devoted care). But I recently had reason to turn back to Little Women…well, more truthfully, I took advantage of my participation in GalleyCat’s World’s Longest Literary Remix Contest (results coming soon!) to revisit it. And when I took a close look at Chapter 1, I was startled by the sheer restless, anxious energy that spews forth from the book’s first beloved pages.
Just look at the verbs and descriptions: over the course of a few passages, Jo
- grumbles
- lies on the rug
- states her work makes her “ready to fly out the window or cry”
- laughs
- stretches
- puts her hands in her pockets and whistles
- pulls off her hairnet and shakes down her hair
- warms Marmee’s slippers
- chokes on her tea and drops her bread, butter side down, on the carpet…
- and sings with her sisters.
Could there be a better portrait of the restless energy of a 15-year-old girl too big for her body and outgrowing everything about her life? Could there be anything more appealing to a modern girl (or struggling, tired, manic, stressed-out woman)? The beauty, of course, is that some of that anxious spirit comes from Louisa herself. And just one chapter in, I’m plunged back into one of my primary reasons for persevering: my admiration of an unconventional “little woman” and of her creator, who had this to say about strife:
I’m not afraid of storms, for I’m learning to sail my ship.





my absolute favorite book of all time!
I hear you, Erin. I’m in a time of ups and downs too – and I just went back and reread I Capture the Castle, which is full of the restless energy you describe here. I love Jo, too, and her blunt honesty about a life that isn’t enough for her. I hope you’re finding some peace today.
Oh, I’m glad to read this–I love Alcott’s books and sometimes wonder if I’m the only one that still appreciates them when reading them as an adult.
Lovely analysis. I’m rereading Pride and Prejudice and thoroughly enjoying the awful people Lizzie Bennett knows!