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Essay heading: Louisa May Alcott
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Biographies |
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| Date added: |
January 1, 2000 |
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3 / 809 |
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March. The loving Marmee, the plays in the barn, Jo's struggles to become a writer, and Beth's death all were real.
Alcott worked at any job open to women in her era; she sewed, "went out to service," minded children, taught school, and eventually managed to sell her short stories to the penny press... displayed 300 characters
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She describes her early struggles to support her family in Work (1873). During the Civil War she spent six weeks as a nurse at the Union Hospital in Georgetown, where she contracted typhoid fever; she also collected material for the stories in Hospital Sketches (1863), which attracted national attention and set her on the road to success as a writer... displayed next 300 characters
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