Description
Used Book in Good Condition
This story is presented as another sequel to the ‘Alice’ stories and I think it actually is one of the more succesful attempts to write one. The author manages to match Carroll’s writing style very well. The book follows a structure, so the jokes and events are not completely random. I also quite like Jenny Thorne’s Tenniel inspired illustrations. However, the jokes and most of the poetry cannot match Carroll’s wittiness by far.
Used Book in Good Condition
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This classic ‘Little Golden Book’ from Disney, originally published in 1951, retells the scene in which Alice joins the Mad Hatter, the March Hare, and the Dormouse for a mad tea party.
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Many autors have attempted to write stories in ‘Wonderland’ style, pretending them to be recently recovered ‘lost’ stories by Lewis Carroll. This book is different. It is Carroll’s original “Through the Looking Glass” tale, but in a ‘lost format’. The story is printed in a font based on Lewis Carroll’s handwriting, and it contains more than 30 pen-and-ink drawings, trying to mimic Carroll’s style. The result is a book that quite looks like a manuscript that Lewis Carroll could have written, if he had indeed created one for the “Looking Glass” story!
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This book provides a ‘behind the scenes’ look, with photo’s and fun facts, for all of Walt Disney’s Alice in Wonderland related productions – from his ‘Alice comedies’ in the 1920’s, to his 1951 cartoon movie, to the more recently released live action movies directed by Tim Burton and James Bobin. Even the Disney theme parks get mentioned.
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This book pretends to be another sequel to the ‘Alice’ books, lost for years but discovered after Carroll’s death. The story is about Alice who shuts up like a telescope and travels to the moon. It is set up like Martin Gardner’s “Annotated Alice”, with annotations in the margins that explain several of the jokes and references in it.
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Retelling of Disney’s Alice in Wonderland cartoon movie from 1951. The book has colorful illustrations and includes 40 stickers.
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If you enjoyed Lewis Carroll’s books “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland” and “Through the Looking-Glass and what Alice found there”, this is the book for you! Finally, there is a third story in the ‘Alice’ series – written in Carroll’s familiar style, but packed with a great number of completely new puns, poems, and satire.
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