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  1. Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There (1871) is a novel by Lewis Carroll, and the sequel to Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (1865). Alice again enters a fantastical world, this time by climbing through a mirror into the world that she can see beyond it.

  2. Dec 27, 2016 · LEWIS CARROLL’S NEW STORY THROUGH THE LOOKING-GLASS, AND WHAT ALICE FOUND THERE, By Lewis Carroll, author of “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland.” With fifty illustrations, by John Tenniel...

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  4. Nov 25, 2020 · Through the Looking-Glass: plot summary. The novel begins with Alice sitting indoors on a winter afternoon, curled up in an armchair with her kitten for company. As the snow falls outside, Alice asks her kitten to imitate one of the chess pieces in front of them.

    • The Creation of The Story
    • Publication
    • Textual Revisions
    • Title
    • Translations
    • Works Cited

    While writing the ‘Looking-Glass’ story, Charles Dodgson (Lewis Carroll) used a lot of material that he had come up with earlier. In the article ‘Alice on the Stage‘ he remarked: In the six years since he wrote Alice in Wonderland, Carroll had been teaching Aliceand her sisters the game of chess. He made up stories to illustrate the moves of the pi...

    On 24th August 1866, Carroll wrote to Macmillan that he was contemplating another ‘Alice’ book: On 6th February 1867, his ideas had become more concrete, as he wrote to his publisher: However, he apparently only started with the actual writing in January 1868. The progress was slow: he completed and sent the first chapter to Macmillan in January 18...

    After publishing the story, Carroll kept improving it, just as he did with “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland”. The first edition of “Through the Looking-Glass” contained a misprint on page 21: “Wade” instead of “Wabe”, which was corrected in later editions. One of the more notable changes by Carroll is his description of the Red Queen, which was ch...

    The title of the book was much discussed by Carroll. The working title of Alice’s new adventures was ‘Looking-Glass House’. It evolved to ‘Behind the Looking-Glass, and what Alice saw there’, which Dodgon mentioned in a diary entry from January 1869. In 1870 a specimen title page was produced that mentioned “Looking-Glass House, and What Alice Saw ...

    The story has been translated into 65 languages, and 1,530 different editions were identified all over the world in 2015. The number keeps increasing (Lindseth and Tannenbaum).

    Borchers, Melanie. “A Linguistic Analysis of Lewis Carroll’s Poem ‘Jabberwocky'”, The Carrollian,no. 24, dated Autumn 2009, published November 2013. Carroll, Lewis. “Reflecting Alice. A Textual Commentary on Through the Looking-Glass“. Introduction and annotations by Selwyn Goodacre, Evertype, 2021. Demakos, Matt. Cut-Proof-Print. From Tenniel’s Ha...

  5. Through the Looking-Glass was published in 1871, and is the famous sequel to Alice in Wonderland. Like the first Alice book, Looking-Glass is a brilliantly plotted, wonderfully inventive nonsense story, full of humour, riddles and rhymes.

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  6. Jan 26, 2010 · Hardcover, 368 pages. Delacorte Press. List price: $25. Like most preteen heroines of classic children's literature, Alice (of Alice in Wonderland, of course) is a mistress of misrule:...

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