Before her wider fame as the author of Little Women, Louisa May Alcott
achieved recognition for her accounts of her work as a volunteer nurse
in an army hospital. Written during the winter of 1862-63, her lively
dispatches appeared in the newspaper Commonwealth, where they were
eagerly read by soldiers' friends and families. Then, as now, these
chronicles revealed the desperate realities of battlefield medicine as
well as the tentative first steps of women in military service.
Writing under a pseudonym, Alcott recounted the vicissitudes of her
two-day journey from her home in Concord, Massachusetts, to Washington,
D.C. A fiery baptism in the practice of nursing awaited her at
Washington Hospital, where she arrived immediately after the slaughter
of the Army of the Potomac at the battle of Fredericksburg. Alcott's
rapidly paced prose graphically depicts the facts of hospital life,
deftly balancing pathos with gentle humor. A vivid and truthful portrait
of an often overlooked aspect of the Civil War, this book remains among
the most illuminating reports of the era's medical practices as well as
a moving testimonial to the war's human cost.