Showing posts with label Louisa May Alcott. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Louisa May Alcott. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 29, 2016

Oh To Be Jo March

Happy 184th Birthday to
"The Most Beloved American Writer"
By Norman Rockwell


Today's Google Doodle in honor of Louisa May Alcott
More in the Telegraph and on youtube

I intend to get back around to writing more about beloved author Louisa May Alcott and her beloved heroine Jo March; but until such time, there is this great Alcott Blog to look at, with lots of illustrations!

Thursday, May 12, 2016

Stay!

At Dusk From My Hotel Window in San Francisco

“Stay is a charming word
in a friend's vocabulary.”


from Concord Days (p 73)
by Amos Bronson Alcott, 1799 - 1888
American transcendentalist, philosopher, and reformer

(occasionally misattributed to his daughter Louisa May Alcott)



"Then you'll stay, right? Please stay."
Stay, such a seductive word.


from Only Begotten Daughter (p 193)
by James Morrow, b 1947
American novelist of philosophical and theological satire,
science fiction and fantasy

STAY ~ SF Mural Arts

Thursday, July 3, 2014

Orchard House

House of my girlhood dreams -- oh to be one of the March sisters!
Surely one of the best loved houses in America!
Orchard House ~ Concord, Massachusetts ~ Setting for Little Women

Favorite lines from Louisa May Alcott:

"Help one another is part of the religion of our sisterhood."
from An Old-Fashioned Girl, Chapter 13, "The Sunny Side"

"Housekeeping ain't no joke."
from Little Women, Chapter 11, "Experiments"
Way back before netflix streaming, I once heard a friend refer to “Commercial Quadrant Cleaning.” I thought it might be some fancy version of Merry Maids! But no! It was her term for cleaning one quarter of each room in her house, during each segment of tv commercials! She said it worked like a charm!

Here's a more romantic view of tidying up,
my girlish idea of what it would be
like to live in charming Orchard House!
Thanks to my brother Aaron for giving me
this little tray back when we were kids

Thursday, June 12, 2014

The Thrilling Quotidian

Sunrise

Thinking back to the beginning of this blog,
exactly five years ago today!

Andy Warhol: “You need to let the little things that would ordinarily bore you suddenly thrill you.”

Bertrand Russell: "The time you enjoy wasting is not wasted time."

Brian Andreas: "It's hardest to love the ordinary things, she said, but you get lots of opportunities to practice."

Muriel Barbery: “When tea becomes ritual, it takes its place at the heart of our ability to see greatness in small things. Where is beauty to be found? In great things that, like everything else, are doomed to die, or in small things that aspire to nothing, yet know how to set a jewel of infinity in a single moment?”
~ from The Elegance of the Hedgehog, 91 [see also Bouquet, Go, Factotum & The Tree Wins]

Susan Cheever: Little Women, Louisa May "Alcott's greatest work was so powerful because it was about ordinary things -- I think that's why it felt ordinary even as she wrote it. She transformed the lives of women into something worthy of literature. Without even meaning to, Alcott exalted the everyday in women's lives and gave it greatness."
~ from American Bloomsbury, 192

Arundhati Roy: “Perhaps it's true that things can change in a day. That a few dozen hours can affect the outcome of whole lifetimes. And that when they do, those few dozen hours, like the salvaged remains of a burned house---the charred clock, the singed photograph, the scorched furniture---must be resurrected from the ruins and examined. Preserved. Accounted for. Little events, ordinary things, smashed and reconstitutred. Imbued with new meaning. Suddenly they become the bleached bones of a story.”
~ from The God of Small Things
[Thanks to my friend Sheri Reda for this one!]

Moonrise

“Do not ask your children
to strive for extraordinary lives.
Such striving may seem admirable,
but it is the way of foolishness.
Help them instead to find the wonder
and the marvel of an ordinary life.
Show them the joy of tasting
tomatoes, apples and pears.
Show them how to cry
when pets and people die.
Show them the infinite pleasure
in the touch of a hand.
And make the ordinary come alive for them.
The extraordinary will take care of itself.”

William Martin
The Parent's Tao Te Ching: Ancient Advice for Modern Parents
[Thanks to Jason Dufair & Malcolm Eastler for this one!]