Pros: Coherent story and wacky adventures
Cons: None
The Bottom Line:
Very creative
In fun, absurd sort of way
Better Alice
book
No, I Don't Have it Backwards. I Enjoy This Book More Than the First.
While I wouldn't swear to it, I have this vague recollection
of greatly enjoying Through the Looking Glass and What Alice Found There as a
kid. So I was actually looking forward
to rereading it. Turns out I was right,
this is a fun little book. In fact, I
like it more than Alice
in Wonderland.
One cold afternoon, Alice
starts day dreaming about what the world might look like through the looking
glass. Suddenly, the mirror begins to
shimmer, and Alice
finds herself in Looking-Glass House. At
first, she is quite amused to find that the chess board is alive. But as she tries to wander out to the garden,
she finds the pieces have grown to be life like. Soon, she finds herself a willing pawn in
their game, attempting to make it to the eighth row and become queen
herself. Along the way, she meets
Tweedledum and Tweedledee, not to mention Humpty Dumpty and the Lion and the
Unicorn. Will she make it to become
queen?
To be perfectly honest, one reason I enjoy this book so much
more than the first is that there is a coherent story. Outside of the first couple chapters where Alice is exploring the
house and garden, there is a specific purpose behind her wanderings. True, she's still meeting strange creatures
for surreal experiences, but they are part of the path.
I wondering how many of these characters she meets along the
way are storybook characters - or at least old nursery rhyme characters. For example, when Alice first hears about the Lion and the
Unicorn, she quotes a poem that proceeds to come true concerning the two. I've read it as such, but even so I feel like
I am missing something.
Speaking of poems, this book contains several of Lewis
Carroll's poems. You'll find "The
Walrus and the Carpenter" as well as "Jabberwocky."
I had forgotten just how much Disney borrowed from this book
for his Alice
in Wonderland movie. Beside Tweedledum
and Tweedledee, Alice
finds herself in a garden of talking flowers in this book. Granted, they don't sing to her. Also, it is Humpty Dumpty who first
introduces Alice
to the idea of an unbirthday.
Another thing I like about the book is the fun way the
mirror world is used. Alice walks away from something to get closer
to it, for example. And the faster she
runs, the more she stays in place. My
favorite example involves the White Queen, who howls in pain before she is
pricked by a pin. As soon as it happens,
she moves on and thinks it is silly to cry now that it has happened.
Okay, so some of that has to do with this being another of Alice 's dreams. A few times, Alice doesn't know how she got to the next
scene. I've had dreams like that. That might help account for running in place
or moving away from something to get to where you want to be as well. But either way, I enjoyed those scenes.
For a book that is about 150 years old, the language isn't
that bad. I remember reading it in late
elementary school and following it just fine.
And I'm sure even younger kids would enjoy it if it were read aloud to
them.
While there is nothing wrong with Alice 's first wacky adventure, Through the Looking Glass is the superior book. Its
plot gives it a more coherent framework on which to hang the absurdity.
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