“HER CHARACTERS ARE FULL OF THE BUOYANT, FREE, AND HOPEFUL SPIRIT”: FIRST EDITION OF THE FINAL NOVEL IN THE LITTLE WOMEN SERIES, ALCOTT’S JO’S BOYS, 1886
ALCOTT, Louisa May. Jo’s Boys, and How They Turned Out. Boston: Roberts Brothers, 1886. Thick octavo, original brown cloth, pictorially stamped in red, black and gilt, patterned endpapers. Housed in custom clamshell box.
First edition, first state of Jo’s Boys, the third and last in the unofficial “Little Women” trilogy, chronicling the misadventures of the extended March family, with a frontispiece portrait of Alcott.
In 1865, while serving as editor of Merry Museum, a Boston children’s magazine, Alcott received encouragement to write a book for girls. Drawing on memories of childhood, the author portrayed the daily lives of Amy, Jo, Beth and Meg March— portraits of the four Alcott sisters. Her Little Women (1868) is one of the most popular juvenile books ever published, “an outstanding achievement of 19th-century American literature, and the first children’s novel written in that country to have become an enduring classic.” It was followed by Little Men (1871) and later by its sequel Jo’s Boys, which continues the story of her feisty protagonist Jo and the adventures and misadventures of the extended March family. “Alcott’s books… still retain their appeal to youthful readers. Their charm lies in their freshness, humor, and true understanding of the feelings and pursuits of boys and girls. Her characters are full of the buoyant, free, and hopeful spirit characteristic of their creator” (DAB). First state, with the text block measuring 1-1/16 inches. BAL 211. Owner label.
A fine copy.