Book description
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (commonly shortened to Alice in Wonderland) is an 1865 novel by English author Lewis Carroll (the pseudonym of Charles Dodgson). It tells of a young girl named Alice, who falls through a rabbit hole into a subterranean fantasy world populated by peculiar, anthropomorphic creatures. It is…
Why read it?
12 authors picked Alice's Adventures in Wonderland as one of their favorite books. Why do they recommend it?
This book has become so familiar to us through cartoons and movies that we often forget how very weird it is as a piece of writing. The book begins when Alice, bored of her sister’s company, notices a white rabbit muttering to itself “Oh dear! Oh dear!”, and starts to become curious—not, mind you, because talking rabbits are impossible, but only because they are so very intriguing.
The rest of the book shares this bemused tone: Alice will be subjected to all sorts of indignities, including a near-beheading, but as a “good” Victorian girl, she will generally accept the bizarre…
From Matthew's list on Victorian novels written in a weird style.
I was an Alice fanatic when I was a kid. The only book I read more times than Alice in Wonderland was Alice Through the Looking Glass.
It is commonly thought that Carroll based his mind-altering substances (the bottle marked “Drink Me,” the cake labeled “Eat Me”) on opium or laudanum. However, according to scholars of Carroll’s work and life, that doesn’t seem to be the case.
Like my own invented drug, Granadone, in my book, Carroll’s substances were pure fiction, and the alterations in perception that he wrote about were derived organically.
From Rachel's list on books that feature a fictional drug.
I have never tired of Alice’s outrageous, surreal romp through the world of imagination.
It transports me to the magical strangeness not only of Wonderland but also of this world. I love the way unlikely adventures can happen, how odd friendships can arise, how reality can shift just as fantasy does. It empowers my own imagination and channels it into creativity and wonder.
From Rebecca's list on to cheer you up and get you to look around.
If you love Alice's Adventures in Wonderland...
Behind it’s light and easy simplicity, this book is truly genius.
No wonder - Carroll was a mathematician and I absolutely love the way his very logical brain built up the most outlandish and nonsensical adventures into a beautiful experience of life itself, with its absurdities and quirky sense of humour.
From Kristina's list on personal growth and transformation.
I love Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. The odd characters that Alice comes in contact with and the strangeness of the world she transports to is something I have always found fascinating. The world is unique, which is something I strive for in my writing as well. I spend a lot of time world building for my books and this book is what really showed me the benefits of having a unique and interesting world.
From Zachary's list on fantasy that transport you to unimaginable places.
Alice’s Adventures In Wonderland is the original talking cat novel, though Carroll wasn’t the first to describe a grinning Cheshire Cat. I read the book as a child and loved it, and was especially taken by the Cheshire Cat who appears and disappears at will, and engages Alice in amusing but perplexing conversations. I never forgot the bit where the cat disappears gradually until nothing is left but its grin.
From Stephen's list on featuring talking cats.
If you love Lewis Carroll...
I still have the edition I was given for Christmas when I was in elementary school, and followed Alice down the rabbit hole into the original “Upside-Down.” I was ready for the wordplay, the utter strangeness of Wonderland, and how Alice held her own against Red Queens and hookah-smoking caterpillars and the rest. It freed my imagination from the bonds of realism.
From Valerie's list on young women saving their own lives.
You may have read Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland as a child, but it may be worth another read as an adult. Did you know that Lewis Carroll was also a mathematician, logician, professor, philosopher, and poet? As an adult, I have become enchanted by the cascading levels of deeper, and at times esoteric, meaning Carroll encoded into this tale and its sequel. It seems that Taylor, too, was inspired by Alice. Some of the many references to Wonderland in her work include: lyrics about falling down the rabbit hole, a song titled "Wonderland," and Alice imagery in music…
From Kristina's list on if you love Taylor Swift.
Bear with me for a moment. Yes, there are grave and deep questions about Lewis Carroll, none of which I’d ever minimize, but when talking about great MG books featuring chess, Alice is the OG. Alice’s second adventure mirrors a game of chess in the action and character arcs. At the beginning of this tale, Alice is powerless, a true pawn. In order to reach her goal, she has no choice but to follow the rules of the game; all of which are fixed and unmovable. Yet, through the story, she becomes more confident and able, maturing and eventually evolves…
From Alysa's list on for chess lovers.
I love the comical madness that Lewis Carroll has created for Alice. I can’t help but think of Escape rooms and fun challenges that we engage in to replicate the imaginative worlds we’ve read about in books like Alice in Wonderland and The Wizard of Oz. I love that this is a girl’s adventure, and we join her as she is questioning, following her instincts, and reasoning with the unreasonable.
From E. W.'s list on other worlds.
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