Little Women
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Who was better. ? Laurie or Mr.bahaer
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Marte
(last edited Aug 22, 2013 10:56AM)
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Aug 22, 2013 10:56AM

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Exactly! And while I think Bhaer is a good man, I don't understand why Jo would do for Bhaer what she said she couldn't for Laurie. I mean, think about it. She said she wanted to be free to write and live a good life, and yet by Little Men she doesn't really seem like much of a writer. And she seems no longer the same girl we knew in Little Women. Even though she's older and more mature, it just seems like the change is a little too much.
Silverpiper wrote: "They were two different people. I don't see one as "better"(?) than the other."
Not better, just more preferred. I guess you could say we're talking about which one is better for JO.
Not better, just more preferred. I guess you could say we're talking about which one is better for JO.




Interesting opinion - thanks for trying to get behind the author's "intentionality" in her writing.
Perhaps. I mean, I guess you can't deny the fact that Alcott went through a lot in her life and was definitely a lot different from what the general public thought her to be.

Brenda wrote: "No, that is what C.S. Lewis called the personal heresy -- the idea that everything the writer writes about is about the writer, or autobiographical in nature. To some extent this is true, but in ot..."
Lol. I do think that Alcott had some dark moments in her life, but I do understand what you mean. If Charles Dickens was like Scrooge during his productive life I don't know what people would think. Same goes for Tolkien. I highly disagree that he ever encountered a dragon or a group of dwarves.
Lol. I do think that Alcott had some dark moments in her life, but I do understand what you mean. If Charles Dickens was like Scrooge during his productive life I don't know what people would think. Same goes for Tolkien. I highly disagree that he ever encountered a dragon or a group of dwarves.
Let's just say both are nice, both have their own good points.......
Still, I would've chosen Laurie if I were Jo. But I guess it wouldn't have been a good book if LW were cliched.
Still, I would've chosen Laurie if I were Jo. But I guess it wouldn't have been a good book if LW were cliched.

True, true.

Confession time - Professor Bhaer was my first fictional crush (I was 13... which explains a lot, I guess).


First off, L.M.A. tells why Laurie and Jo are not suited to each other for marriage, when Marmee tells Jo that they are both too volatile; their marriage would be a lot of fighting and eruptions of their mercurial temperaments. Not advice young people want to hear, but Jo instinctively agrees, as she valued Laurie as a companion in her quest to live outside the women's sphere of her day. Professor Bhaer, whom I think of as being about 12-15 years older than Jo, was stable and sure enough of his own manhood to allow Jo the freedom she needed to be herself, while also allowing her to function as a woman and mother, a role the 19th century valued highly. L.M.A. herself never married, and became the chief breadwinner for her family, which was a very mixed blessing.


Oops, sorry for the long post!


I read somewhere that Alcott didn't want Jo to marry at all. It was her publisher who pushed for a wedding. And that Bhaer reflected all the qualities that she admired in her friend, Ralph Waldo Emerson.

I can believe that.


wow. i would love to read your whole analysis on this book. ive never thought about those kinds of things. but i do feel like the ending was more bittersweet than a happy ending. which makes me love the book even more. tho i prefer jo ending up with laurie. awwww how i wish they married instead of mr.bhaer

by the way you put it, "bearded dude" hahahahahhahahahah i think i lost all my respect for mr. bhaer for a moment and just imagned him as a dirty old man with no fashion sense.

We do know that Jo wrote some sentimental books for girls ( I always imagined something along the lines of Little Woman and Alcott's other classics) in between Little Men and Jo's Boys. This is mentioned to set up the chapter "Jo's Last Scrape" in Jo's Boys. Incidentally I always felt that that chapter failed to live up to its name. I had pictured a glimpse of the old Jo behind her matronly form getting into something reminiscent of her old "scrapes." Instead we were treated to Jo pretending to be a maid while admiring readers made assumptions about Jo the athuress.


I just finished reading the book for the first time and found it an amazing book! I laughed, cried, felt like I was part of the March family and it was kind of a hard process to come back to reality after finishing it.
I think Jo & Mr. Bhaer are a good match, as are Laurie & Amy. Becoming an adult means taking responsible mature decisions, leaving immaturity and impulsiveness behind, but oh what a difficult path it is... Saying no to Laurie is a huge step for Jo toward adulthood, and very wise, but so sooo sad! I am sure she was in love with him, but her sense told her it wouldn't be good decision.
Taking decisions when heart and mind are not in harmony are horrible. She made the decision with her good sense and it was a good decision, though very heartwrenching.
Jo and Laurie are both very passionate BUT so is Mr. Bhaer, in a quiet way! That's why I think Jo and he suit each other very well. He understands her passions and her inner fire, but doesn't show it so much himself and he is much more mature than Laurie.
Amy and Bhaer are able to 'tame' Laurie and Jo. Laurie and Jo together would do silly and stupid things, led by their fire and passion and it would lead to a huge explosion.
Bhaer respects Jo and lets her be herself without taking part himself in the silliness of her actions, as Laurie would do.
So, Mr. Bhaer is a good, mature man, nice character and right for Jo.
But I like Laurie more myself! I just loved him. Passion, kindness, loyalty, silliness... It's that kind of guy I would fall in love with. I think that's why I was so sad when Jo rejected him although I knew Bhaer was better for her. I'm happy Amy got him, I liked her character better and better. She ended up being one of my favourite characters, like Laurie and Jo.

Anne wrote: "I Agree with you!!! Laurie also became a drunk and a womanizer :( BAD"
Maybe he became that because he lost the love of his life?
I think they both were too young and Jo especially was too young (and scared?) to recognize romantic love and maybe unwilling to grow up. For me Bhaer seemed more like a father figure (my own father was 14 years older than my mother).
But I think Laurie and Jo would have made a better match (because they were such a good friends), after a few years, but then he had to marry Amy. That was too fast for me, too.


YES! I found it creepy, but at least he's a nice guy....
I liked Laurie better :)"
In those days, it wasn't uncommon or even unusual to take a wife younger than you. It happened all the time. What's weird is that Baer wasn't married already. Unless he was widowed. I haven't read the book in awhile so I may have forgotten that part.

I think it wasn't uncommon then for guys who were working for the money to immigrate to the US to remain unmarried then. With married couples there was often a separation while one partner went to the US to earn the money to bring the other partner over, so waiting until after the move and then finding a partner state-side was more sensible.
Not that most people are that sensible when it comes to marriage... ;)

Well, he criticized only because he could tell she wasn't writing her best work. She was writing for the magazines and catering to their desires, which didn't match her own. Mr. Bhaer saw that and called Jo on it. Of course it was frustrating to Jo. She was probably already frustrated enough having to write for her editors instead of herself, and then having to hear that even those efforts weren't working. Grrr! I think it's important that Mr. Bhaer (who I think was a good match for Jo) saw Jo's potential and didn't want her to lose sight of it.
Laurie was a nice guy. He was Jo's friend, he was handsome, romantic, la de da de da, but did he really know Jo? I mean, did he actually see her as the intelligent and passionate woman she was, or did he only see his fun and exciting friend who was also beautiful and cared about him and made him feel important? Mr. Bhaer saw the real Jo and appreciated her.
The age difference between Jo and Mr. Bhaer may seem. . . different. But it felt right. And as many have said, it wasn't unusual for that time period. If I were the writer, I would have made the age difference less. Make him maybe late twenties instead of late thirties. But it did work.


P.S.: Everybody who thinks it's strange for someone to marry an older guy... it's not that creepy. I have a lot of friends my age (tomorrow 22) who are having a relationship with someone who is 11, 12 or 13 years older.


Right, Rosella.


I could not agree more, and yet, I felt that Amy did not deserve Laurie. That's what bothered me about the book. I thought, like Emily did (4 up) that Laurie would end up with Beth. Amy was the youngest and so pampered and spoiled and I thought she got a "free ride" with falling in love with Laurie. Her life was definitely the easiest of the four sisters.

Laurie was also a little spoiled and pampered. Maybe that's why they worked as a couple.


I think by the time she and Laurie get together, Amy has matured considerable. The problem is that she does much of this outside of the main thread of the story -- she most matures while staying with Aunt March while Beth is ill, and then she matures while traveling. In both cases we are told about this more than actually seeing it, so I think for some it doesn't feel so real.
I also think a lot of people never forgive Amy for burning Jo's book. I don't. But I also don't see Laurie as all that wonderful; I share Jo's feeling that he's immature and a bit shallow, and also her disinterest in the kind of life he wants to lead, so I don't have any that "Amy's not good enough for him" thing going.

I never saw Jo ending up with Laurie either, but at first I thought she would remain single, so it took me by surprise when she grew so attached to Bhaer.
I just didn't think Amy was mature enough to be in a relationship period. Yes she matured and yes we didn't get to see just how much because for the most part we follow Jo but still, it just was such a cop out. I think I would have preferred if maybe the book ended and Amy and Laurie were closer/engaged but not full on married. Their courtship seemed more in her head and a rebound for him to me. I don't know. I didn't like Laurie that much because he was too emotional for my liking and Amy doesn't know when enough is enough so their pairing was, to me, the most annoying character in the book.

I seem to remember reading somewhere, perhaps in one of LMA's journals or letters, that she didn't want to marry off Jo at all, but that the publisher insisted that the fans expected it. It would certainly lend more credence to the theory that Jo was a thinly disguised version of LMA herself. And of course you meant "Alcott" and not "Austen"?

Yah, I agree Alcott didn't do a good job of presenting Amy's growth, and I would also say she did a better job of it in "Little Women" than in "Good Wives." But of course, she really wasn't that interested in the Wives aspect of that story in the first place. It was her fans and her publisher who were demanding that. So she came up with Professor Bhaer almost as a joke, but her love of Jo and her writing skills make him into a rounded enough character to convince most of those who hadn't seen Jo as ending up with Laurie (and some who had).
When it came to Amy and Laurie, though, IMHO she got lazy.
Erin:
You are quite right about the Alcott not wanting to marry Jo off when her publisher requested it. And also about the fact that I meant "Alcott", not Austen! Ooops! Thanks for pointing that out.

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