Faculty Member Publishes “Little Women” Edition

Harvard University Press in late March 2013 released Daniel Shealy’s new book, Little Women: An Annotated Edition. This lavishly illustrated book is full of insightful annotations. Shealy also provides a scholarly introduction in which he traces the history of Little Women and its author Louisa May Alcott. Shealy has edited or co-edited 11 books about Alcott, including The Journals of Louisa May Alcott. He is professor of English at UNC Charlotte.

From the publisher:

“Little Women has delighted and instructed readers for generations. For many, it is a favorite book first encountered in childhood or adolescence.

Championed by Gertrude Stein, Simone de Beauvoir, Theodore Roosevelt, and J. K. Rowling, it is however much more than the “girls’ book” intended by Louisa May Alcott’s first publisher. In this richly annotated, illustrated edition, Daniel Shealy illuminates the novel’s deep engagement with issues such as social equality, reform movements, the Civil War, friendship, love, loss, and of course the passage into adulthood.

The editor provides running commentary on biographical contexts (Did Alcott, like Jo, have a “mood pillow”?), social and historical contexts (When may a lady properly decline a gentleman’s invitation to dance?), literary allusions (Who is Mrs. Malaprop?), and words likely to cause difficulty to modern readers (What is a velvet snood? A pickled lime?). With Shealy as a guide, we appreciate anew the confusions and difficulties that beset the March sisters as they overcome their burdens and journey toward maturity and adulthood: beautiful, domestic-minded Meg, doomed and forever childlike Beth, selfish Amy, and irrepressible Jo. This edition examines the novel’s central question: How does one grow up well?

Little Women: An Annotated Edition offers something for everyone. It will delight both new and returning readers, young and old, male and female alike, who will want to own and treasure this beautiful edition full of color illustrations and photographs.”