Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass
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6W Lewis Carroll. Sydney: Consolidated Press, 1947
Notes
Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland follows a clever, logical seven-year-old girl named Alice who plunges down a rabbit hole into a chaotic, subterranean world. Along her journey, she encounters an unforgettable cast of eccentric, hyper-literal figures including the Mad Hatter, the Cheshire Cat, and the volatile Queen of Hearts. Beneath the whimsical surface of talking animals, mad tea parties, and upside-down logic, the text functions as a brilliant satire of rigid Victorian education, a complex exploration of mathematical philosophy, and a poignant allegory for the inevitable loss of childhood innocence.
The author, Lewis Carroll, was the lifelong pen name of Charles Lutwidge Dodgson (1832–1898), a brilliant yet deeply introverted mathematician, logician, and ordained deacon at Christ Church, Oxford. Dodgson lived a structured academic life, publishing heavy treatises on geometry while harboring a private passion for photography and storytelling. The catalyst for his timeless fiction occurred on a golden July afternoon in 1862 during a rowing boat trip up the River Thames, where he invented the initial story to entertain Alice Liddell—the young daughter of the Dean of Christ Church—and her sisters. Urged by the children to write the story down, Dodgson painstakingly expanded the tale, adopting his famous pseudonym to publish the first volume in 1865. The monumental success of the book shattered the prevailing tradition of heavy-handed, moralistic children's literature, transforming a stuttering Oxford don into one of the most celebrated figures in global publishing history.
Description
Gray paper boards. Original dust wrapper with loss to lower spine and chipping to extremities. Good condition.
Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass


