American Bloomsbury: Louisa May Alcott, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Margaret Fuller, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Henry David Thoreau: Their Lives, Their Loves, Their Work
by Susan Cheever
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 262)
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biography,
literature
I have a dim memory that I read this once before but I have no record of it and since Susan Cheever is one of my favorites anyway this is now high up on my to-read list. Later I'm glad to have revisited this beguiling book, Cheever's exploration of the extraordinary cross-fertilization of creativity in Concord, Mass., during the mid-19th century, when Emerson, Thoreau, Hawthorne and the Alcotts lived as neighbors there. If it won't offer much new information for serious students of Ameri...more
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Entertaining read on Concord, Mass during the 1840s and 50s. The town was essentially a genius garden cultivated by the money and sweat of Ralph Waldo Emerson. After his first wife (and love) Ellen died young, Emerson inherited a small fortune and used it to buy up properties in Concord and lure New England's most promising minds.
One by one the freeloaders showed up and sucked Emerson dry: first Bronson Alcott and his family, then Thoreau, then Hawthorne and the rest. Margaret Fuller als...more
One by one the freeloaders showed up and sucked Emerson dry: first Bronson Alcott and his family, then Thoreau, then Hawthorne and the rest. Margaret Fuller als...more
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Copied from my blawg: "...focuses on the personal and economic lives of the writers, and it's really oddly organized. Cheever writes, at the beginning of the book, that she's revisiting each event or time period from the point of view of each of the people involved, but I didn't really get that sense so much as a distracting repetition, as if chapters were written as discrete pieces, and some odd jumping around in time. Also, she interjects the first-person in ways that seem really abrupt t...more
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Read in August, 2007
recommends it for:
Boston history, history of Alcott, Thoreau, Emerson, Hawthorne
This book interested me because after reading "The Peabody Sisters," I wanted to learn more about the sisters and the people in their circle. I did learn more about their lives but I had higher hopes from the book after listening to an engaging discussion with the author on NPR this past spring. I also found "The Peabody Sisters" to be so well written that I was disapointed to find this text to not be as detailed or to be written with such focus. I think the background kno...more
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Read in June, 2008
recommended to Polly by:
Mumsie
I found this time period and place very interesting. The people involved and how they influenced each other created quite an amazing community. It was interesting to me to realize that this was taking place simultaneous to the events detailed in Rough Stone Rolling, which I am also reading. The narrator was too intrusive for me, and I disliked her tendency to suggest more than she could prove. The insinuated love affairs were a bit melodramatic compared with any actual evidence. Looking at t...more
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Read in January, 2008
I found this book a fast-read with an interesting topic and inventive format. My high hopes in the beginning fell a bit
short by the end, as the idea of revisiting the same event
from different people's perspectives became more repetitive
than illuminating. I was okay with Cheever injecting her own
reactions and views into the mix; her voice was clear and
her enthusiasm for her topic contagious. However, again, by
the end, some of the belaboring of topics such as Alcott's
mercury poisonin...more
short by the end, as the idea of revisiting the same event
from different people's perspectives became more repetitive
than illuminating. I was okay with Cheever injecting her own
reactions and views into the mix; her voice was clear and
her enthusiasm for her topic contagious. However, again, by
the end, some of the belaboring of topics such as Alcott's
mercury poisonin...more
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Read in April, 2008
I really wanted to like this book, but would've just settled for being able to tolerate it long enough to get through it. I did learn some about these literary greats, but about halfway through got so annoyed with the repetition and jumbled narrative that I just couldn't take it anymore. The author would focus on one character and then in the next paragraph switch to someone/something completely different with no transition whatsoever, leaving the impression that she simply transcribed her not...more
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Read in April, 2008
recommends it for:
fans of Louisa May Alcott
This book is full of fascinating information:
tonight I read that Nathaniel Hawthorne greatly influenced Herman Melville's approach to Moby Dick.
Margaret Fuller bore an illegitimate child, then drowned (I bet many back in Boston thought it served her right).
However, I do wonder if Cheever accepted Geraldine Brooks' fiction about Bronson Alcott too readily: is there any documentation to support Cheever's assertions about Alcott's sexual experiences in the South when he was a peddler?...more
tonight I read that Nathaniel Hawthorne greatly influenced Herman Melville's approach to Moby Dick.
Margaret Fuller bore an illegitimate child, then drowned (I bet many back in Boston thought it served her right).
However, I do wonder if Cheever accepted Geraldine Brooks' fiction about Bronson Alcott too readily: is there any documentation to support Cheever's assertions about Alcott's sexual experiences in the South when he was a peddler?...more
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Has a copy to sell/swap
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Read in June, 2008
recommends it for:
Anyone interested in literary swingers
This was an interesting book - I learned a lot about one of my favorite authors - Louisa May Alcott and the other authors I was forced to read in American Literature class in high school. If teachers started out the semester explaining that Emerson and Thoreau were in a love triangle with Emerson's wife, or that Hawthorne and Emerson were in a love triangle with Margaret Fuller or that Herman Melville had a big huge crush on Nathanial Hawthorne or even that the entire Transendentalist movement ...more
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Read in March, 2008
I enjoyed the information presented. It gave a lot of great insight into this group of amazing authors and how their lives were so interconnected. However, the format of the book did not appeal to me at all. It continually jumps around chronologically without smooth transitions and occassionally the author will interject her own personal history and it is very awkward. Though the topic was fascinating the actually writing often was not clearly presented. So the concept of the book is probably wo...more
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Read in May, 2008
What a wonderful read. If only, if only, if only they had used this in my 11th grade honors English course! This gives such a wonderful insight and understanding into the literature they wrote, the times they lived in, and the relationships they held with one another.
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Read in December, 2007
I grew up reading and cherishing Alcott's Little Women, and as a literature lover, had encounters with the others (except for Fuller) as I navigated through high school and college lit courses. Reading Cheever's book helped these literary luminaries come alive as people. And what lives they led! These were brilliant, passionate artists who experienced unrequited love and flouted convention to be with their heart's desire. This is an extremely readable book that humanizes an important literary an...more
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Read in April, 2007
This book was easy to read, kind of 18th century literary gossip. I had no idea that both THE Thoreau and his brother had a crush on the same girl, who jilted them both, or that they were friends were Louisa May Alcott. I always figured that Louisa's sister stole her boyfriend (just from what happened between Amy and Laurie in Little Women) but this book confirmed my suspicions. I did not know that Henry James stole the Little Women character Jo for his book, however. So, how much fun was Amer...more
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Read in March, 2008
This book was heartbreaking-- such an exciting topic done so poorly. There isn't room to list all my complaints. Among them: endless telling & never showing, unfounded (& perhaps libelous) claims & generally leaden prose. The author seemed unsure exactly what sort of book she wanted to write-- a history? a personal exploration of Transcendentalist-related sites? Or perhaps, a juicy, gossipy book based on unfounded rumors?
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Read in January, 2008
Not uninteresting, but confirms my prejudices against most of these writers as seriously unhappy people whose ideas ranged from odd to dangerous. The book itself, in an effort to weave all these lives together, was choppy and hard to follow. She chose to organize her material somewhat thematically--although even the chapter themes were somewhat obscure at times--rather than chronologically. I do NOT recommend this book.
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Read in August, 2007
Discovering the fuller personalities of these icons of American literature was a heady experience. Who among our friends now is the genius/oddball whose ideas people will still be discussing in 150 years? Learning more about Alcott, Thoreau, Emerson and Hawthorne has inspired me to re-read some of their works and read others for the first time. This book will definitely add meaning to my upcoming trip to Concord, MA.
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Read in March, 2008
I am amazed that the editor of this book let it be published in this form. It's more of a detailed outline than a book. The chapters are almost all about 3 pages long; the longest is maybe 5 pages long. Since each 3 page chapter is about a different topic, nothing in the whole book is explored in depth or analyzed. Nor is there a sense of direction. It is by far one of the worst books I've ever read.
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Read in April, 2007
recommends it for:
American Lit majors and afficianados
If you have read and read about Thoreau, Emerson, Alcott and Hawthorne as I did as an undergraduate, you most likely suspected that their lives intertwined somehow. Susan Cheever weaves the lives of these authors together through careful research and brings these great figures to life. You will want to go back and reread them.
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Read in August, 2007
recommends it for:
American Lit lovers and teachers
I learned that the friendship between Thoreau and Emerson was more than our textbooks lead us to believe. I fell in love with Thoreau just like Cheever claims Louisa May Alcott and Emerson's own wife did. A lovely, quick read, this book will enhance my teaching of the writers of our American past and literary beginning. Enjoy!
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recommends it for:
The transcended
Really into historical American intellectual/social movement crossover. What are the variables that go into the taking up an idea and the spreading of it? How are ideas implemented widely or on a personal basis? A good study should have implications for the current green/sustainability theory and movement.
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