Through the Looking-Glass, and what Alice found there is as funny and fantastic as its predecessor and companion masterpiece Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. Alice "lightly jumped down" into a world peopled by chess pieces (the game itself is woven into the story and Carroll gives the moves in the very first page of the book) and oddly-different nursery rhyme characters: Tweedledum who gets so cross because his "nice new rattle" is spoiled and his brother Tweedledee who recites for Alice the superb nonsense poem "The Walrus and the Carpenter". Through the Looking-Glass has delighted and entranced children and adults for more than a hundred years and will no doubt do so for another hundred.
Author | Lewis Carroll |
Publisher | Macmillan Publishers |
Year of publication | 1991 |
Number of pages | 216 |
Language | English |
Format | Hardback |
ISBN-10 | 333290372 |
ISBN-13 | 9780333290378 |
Illustrator | Sir John Tenniel |
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