"Straddling the line between entertainment and nuanced complexity, this fascinating look at Alcott’s novel is not to be missed."
"Rioux considers the cultural impact and enduring popularity of Louisa May Alcott’s American Civil War-set novel Little Women , a runaway success since it was first published 150 years ago."
"With impeccable research and genuine affection, [Rioux] charts the history of the beloved…novel."
"Highly entertaining…[Rioux] paints a compelling portrait of Alcott, giving us fascinating insights into the creation of Little Women ."
"Lively and informative…Meg, Jo, Beth, Amy does what—ideally—books about books can do: I’ve taken Little Women down from my shelf and put it on top of the books I plan to read."
…Anne Boyd Rioux's lively and informative [book] makes it clear why having these fictive young women implanted in my consciousness has been a good thing, helpful for every girl facing the challenges of growing up to be a woman…Meg, Jo, Beth, Amy does whatideallybooks about books can do: I've taken Little Women down from the shelf and put it on top of the books I plan to read. I'm curious to check in on the March sisters, andinspired by Anne Boyd Riouxfind out how they seem to me now.
The New York Times Book Review - Francine Prose
04/09/2018 To coincide with the 150th anniversary of the publication of Little Women, Rioux (Constance Fenimore Woolson: Portrait of a Lady Novelist) offers a solid and well-illustrated history of the novel’s publication, reception, and adaptations. Rioux lays out biographical background on author Louisa May Alcott and traces her unlikely move from gothic potboiler author to girls’ literature phenom as a result of the book’s wild popularity. Rioux also examines the novel’s many stage and screen adaptations, argues it is as appropriate for boys as girls (a section that could be condensed), and discusses contemporary YA fiction directly influenced by this seminal work. In one section, Rioux explores the many women writers, from Susan Sontag to J.K. Rowling, inspired by the example of Jo March, one of the only early literary models of female authorship. She also successfully highlights important points in Little Women’s history, such as the publisher’s altered 1880 edition (still commonly read) that cleans up Alcott’s lively slang. Throughout, Rioux offers enough detail to entertain and inform without overwhelming the reader. While she notes the novel’s readership has fallen off in recent years, one hopes her well-crafted work will help revive interest in a work she rightfully argues should be placed beside Tom Sawyer as an enduring American classic. (Aug.)
"What a marvelous investigation of Louisa May Alcott’s slyly subversive Little Women ! Anne Boyd Rioux has given us a thorough and insightful examination of the enduring appeal of Meg, Jo, Beth, and Amy, and why generations of readers have claimed the March sisters as their own."
"Reading Anne Boyd Rioux’s engaging Meg, Jo, Beth, Amy: The Story of Little Women and Why It Still Matters , has made me pick up Alcott’s novel yet again with renewed insight and inspiration. Every fan of Little Women will delight in reading this book. And all the women—and men—who haven’t read the novel will race to it after reading Rioux."
"Astute examination of the long life of Little Women. "
The Atlantic - Sophie Gilbert
"Thoughtful…An adroit consideration of Alcott and her milieu."
Wall Street Journal - Meghan Cox Gurdon
"This delightful look at a great American classic…tells the book’s history, explores its abiding appeal, and considers its influence on generations of readers and writers since. It goes without saying that lovers of that book will adore this book. But even those who haven’t read Little Women will enjoy learning about the literary history behind it."
Christian Science Monitor
"A love letter written not by a smitten youngster naïve to her beloved's drawbacks but by a mature adult who can recognize complexity and nuance."
"Meg, Jo, Beth, Amy: The Story of Little Women and Why It Still Matters masterfully peels away the layers of complexity in Louisa May Alcott’s classic novel. Reflecting astute research and scholarship, Rioux’s book is immensely entertaining and informative, and can be easily enjoyed by teachers, scholars, and the multitude of Little Women lovers around the world."
"Highly companionable and illuminating."
★ 12/01/2018 Rioux (English, University of New Orleans; Constance Fenimore Woolson ) commemorates the 150th anniversary of Louisa May Alcott's Little Women with this volume examining the novel's enduring influence. Providing a brief biography of Alcott (1832–88), who faced many hardships yet also saw fame and fortune owing to the work's immediate popularity, Rioux reports ten million copies of the book sold globally since 1868. Moreover, the story has inspired three motion pictures, a play, radio broadcasts, numerous television miniseries, a musical, and an opera, with a new miniseries and film release coming this year. Yet despite its success, critics (especially in the 20th century) have often dismissed the work and schools have ceased teaching what Rioux considers "a core text in the development of feminist literary criticism." Nevertheless, Little Women continues to influence writers and popular media such as television's Gilmore Girls , supporting Rioux's argument for the book to be taught more regularly as it continues to challenge readers. VERDICT Highly recommended for all readers interested in Alcott and her masterpiece's legacy.–Erica Swenson Danowitz, Delaware County Community College Library, Media, PA
2018-05-23 A history of Little Women coinciding with the 150th anniversary of its original publication.When it was published in 1868, Louisa May Alcott's novel became an immediate bestseller. Encouraged by her publishers to write a "novel for girls," Alcott set her coming-of-age-story of four sisters during the Civil War and loosely based their struggles and aspirations on her own experiences with her three sisters. For countless generations of young readers, it has remained a beloved favorite as well as an influential touchstone to scores of aspiring writers. Yet this quietly groundbreaking novel has had more than its share of lukewarm responses from literary scholars, and it appears less frequently on high school reading lists compared to classics by noted male authors. Rioux (English/Univ. of New Orleans; Constance Fenimore Woolson: Portrait of a Lady Novelist, 2006, etc.) writes, "in spite of Little Women's elevation to canonical status, scholars still do not sufficiently acknowledge how key Little Women has been to the development of women's literary traditions in the United States and abroad. It has been a foundational text not only in the history of women's literature but also in individual writers' very conception of themselves as writers and artists." The author devotes the first few chapters to Alcott's family history and early writing career, touching on the similarities—as well as the striking differences—between Alcott's family and the characters in Little Women. Alcott endured considerably more challenging hardships than those depicted in the novel, which continued to fascinate in its many forms. Rioux provides an overview of the various film, stage, and TV incarnations, from the 1933 classic with Katharine Hepburn as Jo to the 1994 version by Australian director Gillian Armstrong (Rioux's favorite). From the 1970s onward, the novel continued to draw closer ties to the evolving women's movement, and its themes of ambition and empowerment have influenced such contemporary TV series as The Gilmore Girls and HBO's Girls.An enlightening, well-documented argument for why this novel is essential—will inspire readers to become acquainted or reacquainted with this influential classic.