
The Pilgrim’s Progress
John Bunyan
The structural backbone of Little Women. Jo names it in chapter one.
CitationNovel, Chapter 1
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."
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.

John Bunyan
The structural backbone of Little Women. Jo names it in chapter one.
CitationNovel, Chapter 1

Charles Dickens
The novel Jo wishes she had written.
CitationCharacter-fit

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Read by Jo after she rejects Laurie. The book is, briefly, all the consolation she has.
CitationCharacter-fit
Take garrets, take pens.



A library full of uncut pages. Gatsby owns the books he was never given the time — or class — to read. The list is a story of longing.



Phonies on every shelf, but a few authors get a pass. Holden actually reads — Fitzgerald, Hardy, Isak Dinesen — between the cigarettes and the contempt.



The original quick-witted reader. Lizzie’s library: novels her mother disapproves of, conduct manuals she ignores, and the letters that change everything.
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