How did you all enjoy ‘Little Women’ this month?
Below are some discussion questions and a quiz. Listen to this part: The questions are just here to help the thinking process along. You don’t have to answer them all out below (unless you really want to). I would love it if you girls would bring up points in the book that stood out to you. You can discuss characters, relationships, attitudes, circumstances, etc. ANYTHING that you want.
Here they are:
• What is important about the title?
• What are the conflicts in Little Women? What types of conflict (physical, moral, intellectual, or emotional) did you notice in this novel?
• How does Louisa May Alcott reveal character in Little Women?
• What are some themes in the story? How do they relate to the plot and characters?
• What are some symbols in Little Women? How do they relate to the plot and characters?
• Is Jo consistent in her actions? Is she a fully developed character? How? Why?
• Do you find the characters likable? Are the characters persons you would want to meet?
• Does the story end the way you expected? How? Why?
• What is the central/primary purpose of the story? Is the purpose important or meaningful?
• How essential is the setting to the story? Could the story have taken place anywhere else?
• What is the role of women in the text? How are mothers represented? What about single/independent women?
• Would you recommend this novel to a friend?
And, I did spend a lot of time searching for a decent personality quiz that can “cast” you as any of the four March sisters. The one that I found wasn’t the best quiz ever, but it was better than any of the other ones. When you take it, leave a comment telling us who you were. Even if you don’t have the time or don’t want to partake in the whole discussion, we’d still love to learn your results.
You can take the quiz HERE.
As I said, personally, I don’t think that it was the best quiz ever, so, if you have any better ones that you know of, leave a comment or email me so I can put it up instead.
Have fun and I’m looking forward to a lively discussion!
(I’ll post my thoughts soon *smiles*)

“How still the room was as they listened breathlessly, how strangely the day darkened outside, and how suddenly the whole world seemed to change, as the girls gathered about their mother, feeling as if all the happiness and support of the lives was about to be taken from them.”
From ‘Little Women’ by Louisa May Alcott; Chapter 15
Little Women is the heartwarming story of the March family that has thrilled generations of readers. It is the story of four sisters–Jo, Meg, Amy and Beth– and of the courage, humor and ingenuity they display to survive poverty and the absence of their father during the Civil War.
(From goodreads)
(For those that do not own the book, you can read it online for free HERE. Or, you can download the eBook for free HERE.)
Goodness! Can you all believe that it is the end of April already? I certainly cannot!
Alright then, about the book:
I am including some discussion questions below that I would like the members who participated this month to read through. You don’t have to take the time to actually answer them in the comment box (unless you really want to) but I’d like you to use these to get your thoughts started and you can chose to share only what you personally found most significant in the story.
QUESTIONS FOR THOUGHT
- When Charlotte meets Captain Jaggery in Chapter Four, she feels reassured that her world has been regained. What does she mean by her world?
- Just before he leaves Charlotte on the ship, Mr. Grummage says “in my world, judgments as to rights and wrongs are left to my Creator.” Who decides right and wrong in Charlotte’s world? How does this change as the story continues?
- When Zachariah offers Charlotte tea and friendship, he says that he and she have much in common. What do you think they have in common? What does Charlotte have in common with Captain Jaggery?
- After giving her the knife and sharing information about the Seahawk’s previous voyage, Zachariah asks Charlotte if she believes in justice for all. Charlotte answers that she believes in justice “for those who deserve it.” How does her sense of justice change as the story continues?
- When Charlotte tells Captain Jaggery about the knife, why does she lie and say Grummage gave it to her? Why does the captain insist that Charlotte keep the knife? Mr. Barlow tells Charlotte that the captain put the sailors on display for her benefit. Why would the captain do that?
- Does it seem realistic for a 13-year-old girl to do the physical work of sailoring-in good weather and in hurricane-as Charlotte does? Since the total voyage lasts only a month or two, would she have time to learn the skills required of a crew member? If she managed to overcome these difficulties, might Captain Jaggery be justified in thinking of her as “unnatural”-that is, outside the normal order of things?
- Early on, Zachariah told Charlotte that a ship captain is like a king or even a god to his people. If that’s true and the sailors were attempting a mutiny, was the captain doing his duty in shooting the stowaway and punishing the would-be mutineers? Charlotte tells the captain that singling Zachariah out for punishment isn’t fair. Is fairness the same thing as justice? Why does the captain ask Charlotte to choose the man to be punished for the attempted mutiny?
- Zachariah says “To kill a hand during such a storm, when everyone is desperately needed, takes a kind of . . . madness.” Do you think the captain is insane? Why does he hate Charlotte so intensely?
- After Keetch betrays Charlotte and Zachariah’s plan, the captain offers Charlotte three choices: to carry out the mutiny, to sail safely home as a normal young lady passenger or to be hanged for murder. Why doesn’t Charlotte consider the first two options?
- Major events in the story depend on Charlotte’s misjudging the people around her-Zachariah, the captain, Keetch and her own father. Does the book suggest how a person might make wiser judgments about people and situations?
- Why does Captain Jaggery’s defeat depend on an accident?
- Charlotte says she had been taught to believe that “greater freedom held sway” in America than in Britain. Is this another misjudgment, according to the book?
- This book has been published with several different covers. Find as many different covers as you are able and compare them. Which cover do you think is most appealing? Which cover most accurately represents the story? If you only have one example of the cover art, do you feel it represents the story well?
- The appendix contains diagrams of the parts of a ship. Did you refer to these during the course of the book? How did they enhance your understanding of the story?
Remember, I would love to hear all of your thoughts and it just takes a minute to write out what stood out to you the most or what you thought was the most significant theme in this incredibly original story.
Love and Blessings,


In 1832 thirteen-year-old Charlotte Doyle boards the Seahawk for the voyage from England to America where she will be reunited with her parents. Believing that she will be traveling with two other families, Charlotte arrives at the dock to discover that she will be the only passenger—and the only female—on the long journey. Evil, danger, mutiny, and, ultimately, courage await Charlotte in this tale of adventure and self-discovery
From Glencoe Literature
Ready to read this incredible book in April? Personally, I discovered this book many, many, years ago and it has always been a favorite of mine. In fact, my copy is so tattered and worn that I do believe that it is almost time to start looking for a new one. Anyway, I love ‘The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle’ and I hope that you all feel the same!
Love and Blessings,

Sorry this is slightly late, all! I still hope that many of you were able to finish reading the beautiful novel ‘Jane Eyre’ this month and will be ready to partake in this discussion.
For those of you who participated in the ‘Emma’ discussion, this time I wanted to try something a little bit different. This time, instead of posting pre-written discussion questions, I’d like to give you think chance to come up with discussion questions of your own.
What interested you? Who was your favorite character? Why? What personality traits or quirks stood out to you? Is there something about the language itself that you found particularly striking?
It’s up to you. The possibilities are endless.
Personally, I adored ‘Jane Eyre’, but I won’t say anymore here, and I’ll post it in the discussion area like I should… I’ve very excited to here the thoughts of all of you lovely Literary Ladies!

“I am no bird; and no net ensnares me; I am a free human being with an independent will . . .”
-From ‘Jane Eyre’ by Charlotte Brontë
Charlotte Brontë’s most beloved novel describes the passionate love between the courageous orphan Jane Eyre and the brilliant, brooding, and domineering Rochester.
The loneliness and cruelty of Jane’s childhood strengthens her natural independence and spirit, which prove invaluable when she takes a position as a governess at Thornfield Hall. But after she falls in love with her sardonic employer, her discovery of his terrible secret forces her to make a heart-wrenching choice. Ever since its publication in 1847, Jane Eyre has enthralled every kind of reader, from the most critical and cultivated to the youngest and most unabashedly romantic. It lives as one of the great triumphs of storytelling and as a moving and unforgettable portrayal of a woman’s quest for self-respect.
(From Amazon)
INTRODUCTION (Excerpted from The Jane Austen Book Club)
Emma was written between January 1814 and March 1815, published in 1815. The title character, Emma Woodhouse, is queen of her little community. She is lovely and wealthy. Se has no mother; her fussy, fragile father imposes no curbs on either her behavior or her self-satisfaction. Everyone else in the village is deferentially lower in social standing. Only Mr. Knightley, an old family friend, ever suggests she needs improvement.
Emma has a taste for matchmaking. When she meets pretty Harriet Smith, “the natural daughter of somebody,” Emma takes her up as both a friend and a cause. Under Emma’s direction, Harriet refuses a proposal from a local farmer, Robert Martin, so that Emma can engineer one from Mr. Elton, the vicar. Unluckily, Mr. Elton misunderstands the intrigues and believes Emma is interested in him for herself. He cannot be lowered to consider Harriet Smith.
Things are further shaken by the return to the village by Jane Fairfax, niece to the garrulous Miss Bates; and by a visit from Frank Churchill, stepson of Emma’s ex-governess. He and Jane are secretly engaged, but as no one knows this, it has no impact on the matchmaking frenzy.
The couples are eventually sorted out, if not according to Emma’s plan, at least to her satisfaction. Uninterested in marriage at the book’s beginning, she happily engages herself to Mr. Knightly before its end.
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DISCUSSION QUESTIONS (You can answer these in the comments, or just bring up other aspects of the book that you found interesting)
- About Emma, Jane Austen famously said, “I’m going to take a heroine whom no one but myself will much like.” Do you like Emma? Why or why not?
- Austen makes an unusual choice by selecting as her main character the most privileged woman in the book, the woman with “little to distress or vex her.” The Jane Fairfax story line (which W.J. Harvey has called the “shadow novel-within-the-novel”) has more traditional elements of tension and drama than Emma’s story. Austen’s own publisher traitorously said of Emma, “it wants incident and romance.” Do you agree? Would you have rather read about Jane?
- Early in the book, Emma tells Harriet she doesn’t plan to marry. But the other women all embody, in one way or another, the serious economic consequences of staying single. The book is filled with women at risk. Discuss with reference to: Miss Bates, Jane Fairfax, Mrs. Elton, Harriet Smith, Miss Taylor.
- Class issues run through every plot line in Emma. How would you describe Mr. Knightley’s views on class and privilege? Harriet Smith is “the natural daughter of nobody knows whom.” Which fact—her illegitimacy or her undetermined class standing—is more important in effecting her marital prospects? How do you feel about Emma’s hopes to see Harriet married above her expectations? How does Emma’s relationship to Harriet change over the course of the book?
- Two characters, Mrs. Elton and Frank Churchill, come into Highbury from the outside and threaten the little community with change. Mr. Knightley likes neither of them. How do you feel about them?
- One effect of the hidden (Jane Fairfax/Frank Churchill) story is to undermine the omniscience of the narrator. Some critics have suggested that the narrator controls the reader less in Emma than in most Austen books. Because of this, Reginald Ferrar has suggested the book improves on rereading. “Only when the story has been thoroughly assimilated can the infinite delights and subtleties of its workmanship begin to be appreciated.” He suggests that rereading Pride and Prejudice allows you to repeat the pleasure you had at the first reading, while rereading Emma always provides new pleasures. (He also says that “until you know the story, you are apt to find the movement dense and slow and obscure, difficult to follow, and not very obviously worth the following.”) Do you agree with any of this? Do you like a book in which the writer’s intentions are not always clear and there is space for the reader to take charge or do you like to know what the writer wants you to be feeling and noticing? How do you feel about the idea of a book that has to be reread in order to be enjoyed? Is Emma such a book?
(Note from Cassie- I know this was a short month and a hard book to get through for most of you. If you didn’t finish it (like me) don’t feel bad. Just participate in the discussion as much as you can and start reading Jane Eyre next month!)

“I never have been in love; it is not my way, or my nature; and I do not think I ever shall.’
-From ‘Emma’ by Jane Austen
Beautiful, clever, rich—and single—Emma Woodhouse is perfectly content with her life and sees no need for either love or marriage. Nothing, however, delights her more than interfering in the romantic lives of others. But when she ignores the warnings of her good friend Mr. Knightley and attempts to arrange a suitable match for her protegee Harriet Smith, her carefully laid plans soon unravel and have consequences that she never expected. With its imperfect but charming heroine and its witty and subtle exploration of relationships, Emma is often seen as Jane Austen’s most flawless work.
(From Penguin Classics)
When the end of February draws near I will make a post with a reading guide and where we can comment and discuss!
Happy reading!
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