Advertisement

Louisa May Alcott's new pseudonym prompts new questions about novelist

04:25
Download Audio
Resume
Elizabeth Pope, curator of books and digitized collections at the American Antiquarian Society in Worcester, assisted Max Chapnick’s research that led to this discovery of “The Phantom” by E.H. Gould. Here she points out the location of the work in the original 1860 newspaper The Olive Branch. (Jesse Costa/WBUR)
Elizabeth Pope, curator of books and digitized collections at the American Antiquarian Society in Worcester, assisted Max Chapnick’s research that led to this discovery of “The Phantom” by E.H. Gould. Here she points out the location of the work in the original 1860 newspaper The Olive Branch. (Jesse Costa/WBUR)

Author Louisa May Alcott was known to write under a variety of names other than her own. But a researcher in Boston believes he has found a new pseudonym — the first to be discovered since the 1940s.

WBUR's Solon Kelleher explains why this discovery is significant in unveiling more about Alcott herself.

This segment aired on December 26, 2023.

Headshot of Solon Kelleher

Solon Kelleher Arts Reporting Fellow
Solon Kelleher is the arts reporting fellow at WBUR.

More…

Advertisement

More from Here & Now

Listen Live
Close