Tag: Little Women
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Little Women Legacy: News from New Jersey with Lauren Cutrone, Featured Author

In this blog post series, we’ll feature contributing authors from our new anthology, Alcott’s Imaginary Heroes: The Little Women Legacy. Today we’ll catch up with Lauren Cutrone, writer, publishing professional, and Jersey girl. Lauren Cutrone reads Little Women in New Jersey. What is your favorite scene from Little Women? There is a very tiny, seemingly insignificant…
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Little Women Legacy: An Idaho Interlude with Marlowe Daly, Featured Author

In this blog post series, we’ll feature contributing authors from our new anthology, Alcott’s Imaginary Heroes: The Little Women Legacy. Today we’ll catch up with Marlowe Daly, who teaches literature, writing, and humanities at Idaho’s Lewis-Clark State College. Marlowe Daly reads Little Women at the Spalding site of Nez Perce National Park near her home in…
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Little Women Legacy: All Smiles from Silicon Valley with KL Allendoerfer, Featured Author

In this blog post series, we’ll feature contributing authors from our new anthology, Alcott’s Imaginary Heroes: The Little Women Legacy. Today we’ll catch up with KL Allendoerfer, California-based writer, science educator, and musician. Contributor KL Allendoerfer reads Little Women with “Pie,” the ubiquitous green droid in front of Silicon Valley’s Googleplex. What is your favorite scene from…
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Little Women Legacy: Giving Back to Our “Imaginary” (and Real!) Heroes

I remember picking out Little Women at the book fair. My 4th grade compatriots championed flashy titles that ranged from the lurid (I’m looking at you, Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark and Chain Letter) to the maudlin (Don’t Die, My Love). And while my own shelves groaned with the adolescent weight of Sweet Valley…
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DEADLINE EXTENDED: Little Women 150th anniversary anthology open for submissions!

“I want to do something splendid . . . I think I shall write books . . . .” -Jo March, Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women, 1868 For generations, children around the world have come of age with Louisa May Alcott’s March girls. Their escapades and trials punctuated our own childhoods—maybe we weren’t victims of…
