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Mario the lone bookwolf's Reviews > Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland / Through the Looking-Glass

Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland / Through the Looking-Glass by Lewis Carroll
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really liked it
bookshelves: classics, fantasy
Read 2 times. Last read January 27, 2023.

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 Carroll´s 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 world-building, 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 isn´t into. Mental strength and self-discipline, 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 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 hero´s journey of one main plot with the strangeness and surreality of the other characters and environment as main driving engines.

Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There

Don´t look behind the mirrors

Maybe a bit too strange
Because of the violence and weirdness, I wouldn´t 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 let´s 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, all-devouring 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 Matrix-style abyssal depths of the hidden human thoughts, fears, and imaginations, the bigger the WTF factor becomes.

Inspiration unknown
I don´t 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 can´t 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:
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Reading Progress

Finished Reading
March 21, 2018 – Shelved
Started Reading
January 27, 2023 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-12 of 12 (12 new)

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message 1: by Sue (new) - rated it 5 stars

Sue Bursztynski Goodness, is this your first reading? I read them when I was seven and loved them. I even called my first doll Alice! There are mathematical puzzles throughout, as he was a mathematician, and Through The Looking Glass is, of course, chess-themed. He has fun sending up existing poems, including stuff the young readers of the time would have had to study, and I’m betting they laughed their heads off.


Mario the lone bookwolf Sue wrote: "Goodness, is this your first reading? I read them when I was seven and loved them. I even called my first doll Alice! There are mathematical puzzles throughout, as he was a mathematician, and Throu..."

Yes it really is.
That´s much great, interesting extra info, thank you for that! I should dive deeper in authors biographies, but that would reduce reading time.
But you motivated me to study him in more detail, because included subconscious messages in works are always a great thing and I didn´t even consider the mathematical part.


message 3: by Sue (new) - rated it 5 stars

Sue Bursztynski Have fun!m🙂


Mario the lone bookwolf Sue wrote: "Have fun!m🙂"
I will, thanks again for the hint.


Cecily What a brilliant review, making one think about something so familiar in totally new ways.


Mario the lone bookwolf Cecily wrote: "What a brilliant review, making one think about something so familiar in totally new ways."

Thank you, that´s exactly what I am intending to do, to add the ocean of reviews some hopefully witty, fresh perspective.


message 7: by Joe (new)

Joe Krakovsky Maybe people are reading too much into it instead of just enjoying it for being out of this world crazy.


Mario the lone bookwolf Joe wrote: "Maybe people are reading too much into it instead of just enjoying it for being out of this world crazy."
This could go both ways, trivializing every novel and saying that it is just entertainment or overanalyzing and trying to find deeper meanings where there is nothing. A mix of both should fit best, but searching for hidden treasures is just fun.


message 9: by Joe (new)

Joe Krakovsky While what you say is true, Mario, the bad monkeying my head is tempted to ask you the hidden meaning in the "Where's Waldo?" book.


Mario the lone bookwolf Joe wrote: "While what you say is true, Mario, the bad monkeying my head is tempted to ask you the hidden meaning in the "Where's Waldo?" book."
Very good point and the answer is that the hidden messages in those search and find, find the error, etc. books for kids are based on the subliminal messages companies and governments use to brainwash the poor boys and girls in an ultra conspiracy. Or it´s nothing and the line between trivial and deep is very difficult to draw and individual.


message 11: by Tom (new)

Tom Stewart Incredible to me that this was published in the mid 1800s. Before War and Peace. I just find that it reads as a more modern work. It's a literary treasure.


Mario the lone bookwolf Tom wrote: "Incredible to me that this was published in the mid 1800s. Before War and Peace. I just find that it reads as a more modern work. It's a literary treasure."

It´s clever, deep, and written for all audiences. Just a unique masterpiece


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