Lewis Carroll’s follow-up to Alice’s Adventures through the Looking Glass includes the introduction of Tweedledum and Tweedledee those most memorable of characters who famously fought over a brand new rattle. It is here, too, that the poem Jabberwocky first appeared and the poem ‘The Walrus and the Carpenter’. Philip Ardagh celebrates the joyfulness of the adventures in his foreword to this volume.
One of a range of Macmillan Classics, beautifully produced hardback editions of some of the best-loved stories from the past. Each has a introduction by another author who, in their turn, have been influenced by the great writers of these books.
Alice goes on another adventure through heriving roomooking-glass to a place even more curious than Wonderland. Her journey through theooking-glass world has a dream-like quality and is filled with eccentric characters and curious adventures. Here too order is turned upside-down: A queen turns into a goat, at a tea party one is not supposed to eat food and a game of chess turns a seven-year-old into a queen.However, this nonsensical world is filled with amazing wordplay and fabulous imagination. The book remains unparalleled initerature and continues to charm its readers, young and old.