Bookshelf · Classic LitPreview

Jo March.

Little Women · 1868 / 2019

The original writer-girl. Jo’s attic library: Pilgrim’s Progress, Dickens, Goethe — and the manuscripts she hides under the floorboards.

"I’d rather be a free spinster and paddle my own canoe."

3 booksCurated · cited · cross-referenced
The shelf, decoded

Why this list.

Jo March reads everything Marmee approves of, plus a stack of penny dreadfuls Marmee does not. The list below is the actual Alcott-cited canon of the March attic.

The reading list

3 books for Jo.

  1. Cover of The Pilgrim’s Progress by John Bunyan
    No. 01On screen

    The Pilgrim’s Progress

    John Bunyan

    The structural backbone of Little Women. Jo names it in chapter one.

    CitationNovel, Chapter 1

  2. Cover of David Copperfield by Charles Dickens
    No. 02Character fit

    David Copperfield

    Charles Dickens

    The novel Jo wishes she had written.

    CitationCharacter-fit

  3. Cover of The Sorrows of Young Werther by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
    No. 03Character fit

    The Sorrows of Young Werther

    Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

    Read by Jo after she rejects Laurie. The book is, briefly, all the consolation she has.

    CitationCharacter-fit

Closing note

Take garrets, take pens.