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Louisa May Alcott 
The Mysterious Key and What it Opened 

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的封面 Louisa May Alcott: The Mysterious Key and What it Opened (ePUB)

“As a child, my hero was Jo March […] But as an adult, it’s Louisa May Alcott.” –Greta Gerwig

The Mysterious Key and What It Opened (1867) is a novella by American author, feminist, and abolitionist Louisa May Alcott. Although less popular than her famed “March Family Saga, ” the novella showcases Alcott’s gift for storytelling and deep concern for children who have suffered. The Mysterious Key and What It Opened is a hidden gem, a work of mystery that explores themes of family, death, and perseverance.

Lillian Trevlyn was yet to be born when her father passed away under unknown circumstances. Not much is certain about Sir Richard Trevlyn’s death beyond her mother’s fragmented account. Curious about her husband’s unknown visitor, Alice—pregnant with Lillian at the time—listens through the keyhole to the conversation going on inside the library. Horrified by what she hears, Alice faints, only to learn later that her husband has been found dead. Raised by her mother, Lillian grows up to be a strong young woman and hopes to put her past misfortunes behind her. While walking on the grounds of her family estate one day twelve years later, she meets a teenager named Paul who asks to be given work. Although he seems an upstanding young man, rumors begin to circulate among the family’s servants, digging up the family’s tragic history. When Paul mysteriously disappears, it becomes increasingly apparent that the past—however distant—has come full circle. The Mysterious Key and What It Opened is a captivating tale of mystery, wealth, and danger from an author known more for her works written for children and young adults.

This edition of Louisa May Alcott’s The Mysterious Key and What It Opened is a classic of American literature and mystery fiction reimagined for modern readers.


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关于作者

Louisa May Alcott (1832-1888) was an American novelist, poet, and short story writer. Born in Philadelphia to a family of transcendentalists—her parents were friends with Ralph Waldo Emerson, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Henry David Thoreau—Alcott was raised in Massachusetts. She worked from a young age as a teacher, seamstress, and domestic worker in order to alleviate her family’s difficult financial situation. These experiences helped to guide her as a professional writer, just as her family’s background in education reform, social work, and abolition—their home was a safe house for escaped slaves on the Underground Railroad—aided her development as an early feminist and staunch abolitionist. Her career began as a writer for the Atlantic Monthly in 1860, took a brief pause while she served as a nurse in a Georgetown Hospital for wounded Union soldiers during the Civil War, and truly flourished with the 1868 and 1869 publications of parts one and two of Little Women. The first installment of her acclaimed and immensely popular “March Family Saga” has since become a classic of American literature and has been adapted countless times for the theater, film, and television. Alcott was a prolific writer throughout her lifetime, with dozens of novels, short stories, and novelettes published under her name, as the pseudonym A.M. Barnard, and anonymously.
语言 英语 ● 格式 EPUB ● 网页 56 ● ISBN 9781513285108 ● 文件大小 1.2 MB ● 出版者 West Margin Press ● 市 Berkeley ● 国家 US ● 发布时间 2021 ● 下载 24 个月 ● 货币 EUR ● ID 7815907 ● 复制保护 Adobe DRM
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