Secure Alices Adventures In Wonderland And Through The Looking-Glass Drafted By Lewis Carroll Accessible As Mobi

causing unpleasant dreams for young children for overyears now, Alice suddenly falls into a hole and sees an empty corridor, where she is, she does not know, Often she does not know if she is herself or maybe someone else In her dreams, Alice encounters many strange kings and queens, talking animals, a hatter, playing cards, a chessboard and many other strange creatures.
It is a fable wrapped in a fairy tale, The book includes many beautiful drawings and makes the story more vivid, It is quite confusing at times, but that is what makes the story this adventure,

My husband put it perfectly when he called this "David Lynch for kids, " I talked about my first time reading this book in a sitelinkBooktube video! Another reread for me, and what a pleasure it was to reconnect with Alices Adventures in Wonderland/ Through the Looking Glass.
Many years since I read this but it still raises a smile! Lewis Carroll's novels Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass first published inand, respectively have entertrained readers young and old for more than a century.
Their magical worlds, amusing characters, clever dialogue, and playfully logical illogic epitomize the whit and whimsy of Carroll's writing,

Alice's Adventures in Wonderland transports you down the rabbithole into a wondrous realm that is home to a White Rabbit, a March Hare, a Mad Hatter, a teadrinking Dormouse, a grinning CheshireCat, the Queen of Hearts and her playing card retainers, and all manner of marvelous creatures.
Through the LookingGlass is your passport to a topsyturvy world on the other side of the mirror, where you have to run fast just to stay in place, memory works backwards, and it is possible to believe as many as six impossible things before breakfast.
Both stories feature the colored classic illustrations of John Tenniel, Try to avoid hyperactive white rabbits

Alice's Adventures in Wonderland aka Alice in Wonderland

How did Caroll get his ideas
Many questions arose both around Carrolls alleged drug consumption and the mental state of the author and besides himself, nobody will ever know.
But it has been used to argue for pro drug consumption by hippies, for damnation by all of their political and ideological opponents, and as part of

The myth of how authors find inspiration
The idea of how the mental state of a writer, or artist in general, influences her/his works is even more fascinating, because the line between sane imagination and creativity and madness or getting lost in a world one created her/himself is thin.
Just genetic luck or pure coincidence may make the difference between a worldbuilding, ingenious, and very successful author superstar and severe, lifelong mental illness, Being in the zone and flow state of positive creative overkill or of uncontrollable mindfucks one really isnt into, Mental strength and selfdiscipline, to let the demons work for one instead of killing them, or a small pharmacological help may make the difference between world fame and mental asylum and completely blocking or losing the controllable and not harmful symptoms might destroy the ability to make such works, take away the needed basis of dreams, hallucinations, and loss of reality necessary to create unique works.
A manifestation of how precious and fragile those human egos, fictional surrogates of what the brain wants, are,

One of the first comedic fantasy works with depth
At
Secure Alices Adventures In Wonderland And Through The Looking-Glass Drafted By Lewis Carroll Accessible As Mobi
a time when there was close to no fantasy literature available, Carroll wrote a precursor of today's bizarro fiction/fantasy/ crossover/horror/comedic whatever genre, focussing on the heros journey of one main plot with the strangeness and surreality of the other characters and environment as main driving engines.


Through the LookingGlass, and What Alice Found There

Dont look behind the mirrors

Maybe a bit too strange
Because of the violence and weirdness, I wouldnt consider it as a clean, normal read for all ages anymore, but closer to the elder kid section.
A true classic, having a lasting impact on pop culture and many other works and tinkering with the ideas of reality, consciousness, the layers of dimensions that might lie beyond the known three, and the realm of interpretations, connotations, and innuendos.


More in it than in stereotypical standard classics
Because it is highly subjective, it is very difficult to draw the line between witty, hidden criticism and satire and simple plot devices with coincidental benefits, and just the author knows what the true intention was.
But just that so many, big, clever, whatsoever generations of adults and parents are thinking about and puzzling around what hidden meanings might be behind that lovely story with beheadings, bipolar, schizophrenic, and generally prone to mental illness side characters, highly developed nanotech that lets one grow and shrink and stuff, differentiates it from other classics.


The extra easter goodie for the adult readers
One of the rare examples where timeless, alldevouring questions have been compressed and distilled to an allegedly benign, nice, little tale for the kiddies, but the deeper the interested adult digs, the further she/he explores the Matrixstyle abyssal depths of the hidden human thoughts, fears, and imaginations, the bigger the WTF factor becomes.


Inspiration unknown
I dont know where Carroll took his ideas from and what inspired him to invent this tale, as for instance other pioneers of fantasy tended to use, steal, and adapt old mythology, but much of the content is just so bizarre that it cant be compared with the typical standards of the innocent except the violence, opportunism, sexism, racism, extremism, and many other evil isms old tales.


Tropes show how literature is conceptualized and created and which mixture of elements makes works and genres unique:
sitelink org/pmwiki/pmwiki. ph I don't get it, . I just don't get it,
I went into this story ready to fall in love! Ready to buy all of the merch upon finishing this story that's loved by so many but here I am, sulking.
Disappointed. I guess this story just goes completely against my nature, There's no logical reason for anything that happens and that frustrated me beyond belief, Every conversation was so exhausting to read, I literally had to take ibuprofen every time I was finished reading for the night because my god, the headaches were no joke,
I'm very saddened that I won't be fangirling over this fandom,
Side note: Am I a terrible person to admit that Alice got on my nerves! Arghhhhhhhhhh, AND EVERY CHARACTER WAS SO FLIPPIN' RUDE!! This is a weird one, The more I read the more I'm okay with the weirdness, Does that say something about me I thought at first I wouldn't read it to my kids because it's too strange, but I'm thinking now I might, They just might like it, We'll see how it ends, Am I lame that I've never read this before

Okay, done with them both, Alice in Wonderland was okay, Still weird. Weird and I didn't understand it, Through the Looking Glass took weird to a whole new level, A bad level. The whole time I was reading it I was thinking, "Is Carroll on crack This makes no sense, " And then I thought maybe I needed to be on crack to understand it, I've had crazy dreams sort of like this, all disjointed and random and all, but that doesn't mean I want to read a book about psycho dreams, And what's up with shaking the poor kitten all the time

I might read Wonderland to the kids, I won't read Through the Looking Glass,

And does anyone really know what this all means Because if it's "just for fun", it wasn't, Dreams , figments of the wondrous mind, what things can it create, . . A little girl named Alice,with her big sister a few years older, sitting on the banks of the gentle river Thames, on a calm , warm sunny day, inhow delightful , still she is bored watching her sibling read a book, not paying any attention to her, with no pictures, imagine that.
. . getting sleepy Out of nowhere a nervous White Rabbit dashes by Alice, no big deal even though it has clothes on, not thinking it peculiar when the animal speaks, looking at a watch, and declares he will be late to an important party.
Intrigued the child follows the rapid rabbit down a large hole, a long tunnel , soon finding a precipice, then falling and falling, the never ending drop continues as the frightened girl starts to believe, maybe, quite possible , arrive finally on the other side of the world, welcome Australia.
Nevertheless landing safely in a pile of leaves, unhurt Alice in a strange hall sees a bottle that says drink me, She the brave girl does, being much too big, for this land, needing to get out, to the beautiful place outside that Alice views, through the door, too small for her and shrinks.
. . this will not be the last time either, her size will vary in future adventures in this magical tale, Meeting a plethora of mad characters, as one of them matter of fact boasts we're all mad here, The Cheshire Cat with his always grinning smile as he fades away and reappears, . . the Queen of Hearts the annoyed ruler frequently shouts and proclaims, "Off with their heads", and her curiouser and curiouser croquet match, . . with real animals for equipment, the Mad Hatter and his perpetual tea party with the March Hare who enjoys puzzling Alice, The mellow Caterpillar likes sitting on top of a mushroom smoking leisurely and showing scorn for the little girl's silly questions, the Mock Turtle who head looks like a cow and is sad, the ugly Duchess sneezing because her maid's over use of pepper, other weird souls in this enchanting book appear.
If you are a type of person who relishes the road less traveled, this will be up your alley, A classic children's fable that will always be a favorite, having sold more thanmillion copies, and adults can be entrapped also, and benefit by the amusing satire of their foibles, which everyone has.
That is being human .