Yes I do know from my own personal perusals of numerous biographies of and about Louisa May Alcott and her family that her, that Alcott’s portrayal in Little Women of her youngest sister Abigail May (who served as the blueprint for Amy March) should probably be taken with a proverbial grain of salt, and that Amy March’s depicted arrogance and often annoying brattiness (especially in part one of Little Women) actually seems to be more than a bit exaggerated and over the top compared to what Abigail May Alcott really was like (although that as the youngest, May did seem to be somewhat coddled at times) and as such also feeling like textual sibling rivalry between Louisa and May (and in my opinion most probably so because if one looks at Louisa May Alcott and her sister Abigail May as actual persons, as historical individuals, they do in my humble opinion seem to have been rather too similar regarding precisely that which would likely cause resentment, issues and sibling related conflicts and situations).
And with the above in mind I was definitely looking very much forward to reading Elise Hooper’s 2017 biographical fiction novel on Abigail May Alcott, as I was hoping that The Other Alcott would provide both a more balanced and also a more in-depth account of May Alcott and her personal development as an artist (and also redeem the Amy March character of Little Women a bit for me, since yes indeed, how Louisa May Alcott depicts and describes her youngest sister in the guise of Amy March does render her not all that likeable and lovable, and that well, Abigail May Alcott really deserves to be both better known and appreciated as an artist and also to not simply be considered arrogant and whiny like Amy March is featured and presented by Louisa May Alcott in the first part of Little Women).
However, I was expecting with The Other Alcott to be given a more balanced depiction and account of Abigail May Alcott and NOT a story where Louisa May Alcott in particular is quite relentlessly and exaggeratedly featured by Elise Hooper as being, as appearing as some kind of one-sided, generally pretty nasty towards her sister harridan. For not only is Hooper in The Other Alcott depicting the sibling rivalries between Louisa and May (and yes, this does generally feel pretty realistic and historically authentic), in The Other Alcott Elise Hooper also renders Louisa as a character as pretty much totally mean spirited, calculating and horrid towards her sister May by making textual use of basically fantasy, by describing scenarios in The Other Alcott that never actually occurred in reality (thus making Louisa May Alcott appear as considerably more problematic and with a much more negative character than she in fact had and also making the sibling squabbles of The Other Alcott between Louisa and May feel much worse and much more painful and uncomfortable than they in fact were, which I for one do consider both a major thematic and contents based gaffe by Elise Hooper and also rather insulting towards both Louisa May Alcott and Abigail May Alcott).