Eve LaPlante
Eve LaPlante is a New Englander who has written many articles, essays, and non-fiction books. Her website is http://www.evelaplante.com. Married with four children, she writes nonfiction books, one of which, SALEM WITCH JUDGE, won the 2008 Massachusetts Book Award for Nonfiction. LaPlante’s ancestor biographies “have been praised as reminiscent of a more celebratory Nathaniel Hawthorne,” according to the Boston Book Festival. In the anthology BOSTON, which includes the preface to LaPlante's AMERICAN JEZEBEL, Shaun O’Connell observed, “Just as Nathaniel Hawthorne dug into the dark history of his ancestry, which reached back both to the original Boston settlement of the 1630s and the Salem Witch Trials of the 1690s, so too did LaPlante trace family members who were rooted in the same eras... Hawthorne took shame upon himself for the misdeeds of his Puritan ancestors, and LaPlante offers praise for her forebears who testified against Puritan repression. As her prefaces to these biographies, a kind of spiritual autobiography, show, Anne Hutchinson and Samuel Sewall were not the dark Puritans many imagined them to be. They remain living presences, even models of rectitude, into the twenty-first century.” LaPlante is a first cousin, four generations removed, of Louisa May Alcott. She collected and edited the private papers of her great great great great-aunt Abigail May Alcott, the abolitionist and suffragist who was Louisa's mother and mentor. [1] She graduated from Princeton University and received a masters in education from Harvard University.[2]
Works
Nonfiction books
- Seized, 1993, 2000
- American Jezebel, 2004, 2005
- Salem Witch Judge: The Life and Repentance of Samuel Sewall, 2007, 2008
- My Heart is Boundless, 2012
- Marmee and Louisa, 2012, 2013
Other works and Articles
- “The Riddle of TLE.” Atlantic Monthly, Nov. 1988 (medicine),
- “Out of Sight, Out of History.” Jul. 2, 2004 (on Anne Hutchinson),
- “Born to Party.” Boston Globe, Nov. 2, 2008 (Ideas cover story on biopolitics),
- “The Opposite of Thanksgiving.” Boston Globe, Nov. 18, 2007 (Ideas cover story on Puritan thanksgivings),
- “A Heretic’s Overdue Honor.” Sep. 7, 2005 (op-ed on Anne Hutchinson),
- “First Steps at Speedskating.” Boston Globe, Feb. 19, 2004
- “Visiting ‘The Dead’ in Dublin.” Boston Globe, Jan. 20, 2002 (travel),
- “What’s in a Name?” Jan. 18, 1994,
- “St. John: Almost Private Isle.” Jan. 27, 1991 (travel),
- “Exile of a Polish Revolutionary.” Apr. 7, 1984,
- “A Wealth of Knowledge.” Oct. 12, 1986,
- “Dying Words: The Irish Language.” Feb. 10, 1985 (cover story),
- “Rattle & Strum.” Nov. 2000 (music),
- “Autumn Leavings: Sweet Pickings.” Oct. 2000 (travel),
- “Pay Dirt.” Sep. 2000 (profile of Maine potato farmer),
- “Edible Complex.” Sep. 2000 (art),
- “Flour Power.” Sep. 1999 (art),
- “The Secret Life of Language: High School Semiotics.” Nov. 1983 (education),
- “Divorce: The Damage (Not) Done.” Spring 2002 (essay/book review),
- “Mother’s Day: Why we should be thanking Louisa May Alcott and Marmee.” May 6, 2013,
- “Alyson’s Orchard.” Sep. 2002 (travel),
- “Hidden Cape Ann.” Sep. 2000 (travel),
- “Seeking Charlotte and Wilbur.” Sep. 1999 (travel),
- “Good Living: Dead Set in Dublin.” Dec. 2002 (travel),
- “Still Life With Jelly.” Jan. 2002 (art),
- “The University That Misogyny Built.” Jan. 29, 2005 (op-ed on Anne Hutchinson),
- “Illinois Jacquet: A lot of Lovin’ in Front.” Sep./Oct. 1983 (music),
- “A Judge of Character: The Reformation of a Salem Witch Judge.” Oct. 2011 (on Samuel Sewall),
- “Discovering Louisa May Alcott's Jewish History on Portuguese Tour.” June 7, 2013 (travel),
- “The Baby-sitter.” Mar. 1998,
- “Our Lady of the Hutch.” Sep. 18, 2004 (op-ed on Anne Hutchinson),
- “Keeping the Landscape Hurdle-Free: Walking in Ireland.” Jul. 8, 2001 (travel),
- “Bread, Tea, and Prayer.” Apr. 7, 1996 (travel),
- “The Perfect Family Size.” Jul. 1998,
- “Five Career Ruts You Can’t Afford.” Nov. 1987,
- “C.B. Fisk’s Monumental Creations.” Dec. 1985 (music)[1]
Book Reviews
Eve LaPlante's books have received many awards () and widely praised. Her reviews include:
Marmee and Lousia
“Abigail May Alcott is at the center of Marmee & Louisa ... ‘Marmee,’ as her daughters called her, was a fine writer, an indefatigable reformer, a devoted teacher — and, above all, Louisa’s literary lodestar ... [After] the wildly popular Little Women...Bronson was in clover. He was, he crowed, ‘the Father of Miss Alcott.’ At last, people came to hear him lecture. To his credit, though, and after his fashion, he mentioned in passing that Louisa’s mother hadn’t yet received ‘her full share.’ To her credit, LaPlante evens the score.” - New York Times[3]
My Heart is Boundless: Writings of Abigail May Alcott, Louisa’s Mother
LaPlante certainly is justified in crowing about “My Heart Is Boundless,” the vibrant companion volume that has been released synchronously with “Marmee & Louisa.” For the first time, Abigail May Alcott’s own writings — once thought to have been destroyed — have been compiled and published. LaPlante has edited and lightly annotated a rich selection of letters, journal entries, and sketches that demonstrate, in Abigail’s own words, the spirited, complicated, visionary woman she was. - Seattle Times[4]
Salem Witch Judge: The Life and Repentance of Samuel Sewall
References
- ^ a b LaPlante, Eve. "Eve LaPlante". Retrieved 20 Oct 2013.
- ^ "Dr. D. M. Dorfman Weds Eve LaPlante". The New York Times. Retrieved 27 Oct 2013.
- ^ Wineapple, Brenda. "Where Credit Is Due 'Marmee and Lousia' and 'My Heart Is Boundless'". The New York Times. Retrieved 27 Oct 2013.
- ^ "An extraordinary mother-daughter pair: Louisa May Alcott and her mother". Seattle Times. Retrieved 27 Oct 2013.