Laura Ingallls Wilder bet that answered your 5th grade homework.You can also put Laura I. Wilder depends on your teacher & your lazyness.I know i spelt it wrong stop screaming you "are" a f******* 5th grader.
Little Women Summary How It All Goes Down
Jo, Meg, Beth, and Amy March are four sisters living with their mother in New England. Their father is away serving as a chaplain in the Civil War, and the sisters struggle to support themselves and keep their household running despite the fact that the family recently lost its fortune. In the process, they become close friends with their wealthy neighbor, Theodore Laurence, known as "Laurie."
As the girls grow older, each faces her own personal demons and moral challenges. Jo, our beloved protagonist, must tame her tomboyish ways and learn to be more ladylike while pursuing her ambition to be a great writer. Meg, the oldest, must put aside her love of wealth and finery in order to follow her heart. Beth, the shy one, must conquer her bashfulness, while Amy, the youngest, has to sacrifice her aristocratic pride. The girls are guided in their personal growth by their mother, "Marmee," and by their religious faith.
The family's tight bonds are forever changed when Meg falls in love with John Brooke, Laurie's tutor. Meg and John marry and begin a home of their own, quickly populated by twins Daisy and Demi. Another marriage seems imminent when Laurie reveals to Jo that he has fallen in love with her, but she declares that she cannot care for him in the same way. Jo goes to New York as the governess for a family friend, Mrs. Kirke, experiencing the big city and trying her hand as a professional writer. Meanwhile, Amy travels through Europe with her wealthy Aunt Carroll and cousin Flo, nurturing her artistic talent. Separately, Laurie goes to Europe accompanied by his grandfather. He pursues his passion for music and tries to forget Jo.
While in New York, Jo meets German expatriate Professor Bhaer, whose intellect and strong moral nature spark her interest. Across the Atlantic, Laurie and Amy discover that they lack the genius to be great artists, but that they make an excellent romantic pairing. When Beth, who has never been strong, dies young, the sorrow of their loss solidifies Amy's bond to Laurie. Back in the States, Jo returns home to care for her bereaved parents and learns to embrace her domestic side.
All the loose ends are tied up as Jo and Professor Bhaer marry and start a boarding school for boys, while Amy and Laurie marry and use the Laurence family wealth to support struggling young artists. The Brooke, Bhaer, and Laurence households flourish, and the novel ends with a birthday party for Marmee, celebrating the extended March family connections and the progress of Jo's boarding school, Plumfield.
Her secret was that she was growing very ill and knew she had little time left because of this.
The Louisa May Alcott novel Little Women is comprised of two volumes. The first of these being the eponymous Little Women, and the second being Good Wives, published in 1869.
In the 1949 version of Little Women, Elizabeth Taylor played the role of Amy.
You can read more, below.
it depends on what type of copy you have. in my book, the amount of pages in it is 175. it depends on how big the typing is and the size of the pages.
I have read Little Women, Good Wives, Little Men, and am working on Jo's Boys (the last three are sequels unless you have a special edition of Little Women that includes Good Wives) I would say there are several, but I think (THINK) the main one is supposed to be Beth's death.
This is a variable number, depending on what edition of the book you are reading.
A reference by Abraham Lincoln to Harriet Beecher Stowe with regard to the publication of her book 'Uncle Tom's Cabin.'
The Second volume was called "Good Wives." It had two sequels "Little Men" and Jo's Boys".
Little Women has been made four different times. The original 1933 version starred Katharine Hepburn, Joan Bennett, Paul Lukas, Edna May Oliver, Frances Dee, Spring Byington, Jean Parker and Douglass Montgomery. The first color version in 1949 starred June Allyson, Peter Lawford, Margaret O'Brien, Elizabeth Taylor, Janet Leigh, and Mary Astor. In 1978, a made for TV version emerged starring Meredith Baxter, Susan Dey, Ann Dusenberry, Eve Plumb, Dorothy McGuire, Robert Young, Greer Garson, Cliff (Potter) Potts and William Shatner. Then in 1994 it was made once again starring Winona Ryder, Gabriel Byrne, Trini Alvarado, Samantha Mathis, Kirstin Dunst, Claire Danes, Chrisitian Bale, Eric Stoltz, John Neville, Mary Wickes and Susan Sarandon.
Some people say that the exposition is when the girls meet Laurie (Theodore) at the dance/party.
It didn't. Well technically women started to write and little women had some of the best pices of literature and made women, especially little ones, prolific writers, but mind you most of the greats are men. Take Shakespeare for example, there is also Homer, Mark Twain, and Dr. Suess.
Their surname was MARCH
^^
worst answer ever...
the sisters' names were:
Margaret (She goes by the name Meg)
Josephine (She goes by the name Jo)
Elizabeth (She goes by the name Beth- she dies)
and
Amy
Many of these books are going to be worth a price close to $10 each. The exact price will vary depending upon its condition.
quickly
slowly
too
evenly
uselessly
overly
deeply
devotedly
proudly
significantly
happily
sloppily
nosily
very
attentively
roughly
independently
rudely
The March Sisters in Louisa Alcott's 'Little Women'
The story became a classic because the story is moving, the characters are extremely well written as well as their point of view, the plot is good and the era the story takes place in was a very crucial time in US History.
Margaret March (or Meg)
Josephine March (or Jo)
Elizabeth March (or Beth)
Amy Curtis March