<P> White's editor Ursula Nordstrom said that one day, in 1952, E. B. White handed her a new manuscript, the only version of Charlotte's Web then in existence, which she read soon after and enjoyed . Charlotte's Web was published three years after White began writing it . </P> <P> Since White published Death of a Pig in 1948, an account of his own failure to save a sick pig (bought for butchering), Charlotte's Web can be seen as White's attempt "to save his pig in retrospect". White's overall motivation for the book has not been revealed and he has written: "I haven't told why I wrote the book, but I haven't told you why I sneeze, either . A book is a sneeze". </P> <P> When White met the spider who originally inspired Charlotte, he called her Charlotte Epeira (after Epeira sclopetaria, the Grey Cross spider, now known as Larinioides sclopetarius), before discovering that the more modern name for that genus was Aranea . In the novel, Charlotte gives her full name as "Charlotte A. Cavatica", revealing her as a barn spider, an orb - weaver with the scientific name Araneus cavaticus . </P> <P> The arachnid anatomical terms (mentioned in the beginning of chapter nine) and other information that White used, came mostly from American Spiders by Willis J. Gertsch and The Spider Book by John Henry Comstock, both of which combine a sense of poetry with scientific fact . White incorporated details from Comstock's accounts of baby spiders, most notably the "flight" of the young spiders on silken parachutes . White sent Gertsch's book to illustrator Garth Williams . Williams' initial drawings depicted a spider with a woman's face, and White suggested that he simply draw a realistic spider instead . </P>

What is the meaning behind charlotte's web