Louisa May Alcott
Louisa May Alcott was an American novelist, short story writer, and poet best known for her classic novel Little Women (1868) and its sequels, drawing from her own childhood experiences with her sisters. An abolitionist, feminist, and activist in temperance and women's suffrage movements, she served as a Civil War nurse, suffered lifelong health issues, and raised her sister's daughter in her later years. She died from a stroke in Boston just two days after her father, at age 55.[1][2][3]
Children's literature
Novels
Short stories
Poetry
Jo's Boys
An Old-Fashioned Girl (Illustrated)
Under the Lilacs
Little Women (Signature Editions)
Little Women
Little Women Book One Complete Text (Charming Classics)
Under the Lilacs
An Old Fashioned Girl
Rose in Bloom [with Biographical Introduction]
Hospital Sketches
Little Women (Flame Tree Collectable Classics)
Jo’s Boys (Little Women series Book 4)
Little Women: A Novel
Little Women (Dover Children's Evergreen Classics)
Jo's Boys
Little Women
Little Women (Painted Editions) (Harper Muse Classics: Painted Editions)
Work: A Story of Experience
Rose in Bloom
Little Women (1) (The Little Women Collection)
Jo's Boys: By Louisa May Alcott : Illustrated
Little Women-Treasury of Illustrated Classics Storybook Collection
Little women ; little men ; Jo's boys
An Old Fashioned Girl