About the Book
In Katharine Weber’s third novel, The Little Women, three adolescent sisters — Meg, Jo, and Amy — are shocked when they discover their mother’s affair, but are truly devastated by their father’s apparently easy forgiveness of her. Shattered by their parents’ failure to live up to the moral standards and values of the family, the two younger sisters leave New York (and their private school) and move to Meg’s apartment in New Haven, where Meg is a junior at Yale. They enroll in the local inner-city public high school, and divorced from their parents, they try to make a life with Meg as their surrogate mother.
Written in the form of an autobiographical novel by Joanna, the middle sister, the pages of the Little Women are punctuated by comments from the “real” Meg and Amy, as they confront their novelist sister both when she strays from the “truth” and when she appropriates and reveals personal details.
Why do readers insist on searching for the autobiographical elements of fiction? When does a novelist go too far in mulching actual experience for a novel? What rights, if any, does a writer have to grant the people in her life and story?
Meg, Jo and Amy: Something Sound Familiar?
By Richard Eder
The New York Times
Riffing on Louisa May Alcott
By Emily Barton
The New York Times Sunday Book Review
An author displays her mind but hides her heart
By Beth Kephart
The Chicago Tribune
The Little Women
By Sally Selvadurai
Book Loons
New York Times Book Review Notable Book
IndieBound
BN.com
Amazon