Alice In Wonderland: Including Alice's Adventures In Wonderland And Through The Looking Glass - Bilingual quotes that celebrate the beauty of language, showcasing meaningful expressions in two unique perspectives.

Alice In Wonderland: Including Alice's Adventures In Wonderland And Through The Looking Glass - Bilingual quotes that celebrate the beauty of language, showcasing meaningful expressions in two unique perspectives.

"Alice's Adventures in Wonderland" is a classic tale by Lewis Carroll that follows a young girl named Alice who falls down a rabbit hole into a fantastical world full of peculiar creatures and whimsical events. Throughout her journey, Alice encounters quirky characters such as the Cheshire Cat, the Mad Hatter, and the Queen of Hearts. Each encounter presents her with absurd challenges and riddles, highlighting themes of identity, curiosity, and the nonsensical nature of reality.

"Through the Looking-Glass," the sequel to "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland," brings Alice into a mirror-image world where everything is reversed. In this strange land, she meets characters like Tweedledum and Tweedledee, as well as the Red Queen. The narrative is structured like a chess game, with Alice progressing toward becoming a queen herself. This sequel deepens the exploration of logic and linguistic play, further immersing the reader in Carroll's imaginative universe.

Both books are celebrated for their inventive language, playful narrative style, and rich symbolism. They challenge readers to think critically and embrace nonsense, making them timeless works appreciated by both children and adults. Alice's adventures not only entertain but also provoke thought about the nature of reality, perception, and the journey of self-discovery.

More ยป

Popular quotes

Taffy. He thinks about taffy. He thinks it would take his teeth out now, but he would eat it anyhow, if it meant eating it with her.
by Mitch Albom
All our human endeavours are like that, she reflected, and it is only because we are too ignorant to realize it, or are too forgetful to remember it, that we have the confidence to build something that is meant to last.
by Alexander McCall Smith
In fact, none of us knows how he ever managed to get his LLB in the first place. Maybe they're putting law degrees in cornflakes boxes these days.
by Alexander McCall Smith
The value of money is subjective, depending on age. At the age of one, one multiplies the actual sum by 145,000, making one pound seem like 145,000 pounds to a one-year-old. At seven โ€“ Bertie's age โ€“ the multiplier is 24, so that five pounds seems like 120 pounds. At the age of twenty four, five pounds is five pounds; at forty five it is divided by 5, so that it seems like one pound and one pound seems like twenty pence. {All figures courtesy of Scottish Government Advice Leaflet: Handling your Money.}
by Alexander McCall Smith
Look, if you say that science will eventually prove there is no God, on that I must differ. No matter how small they take it back, to a tadpole, to an atom, there is always something they can't explain, something that created it all at the end of the search. And no matter how far they try to go the other way โ€“ to extend life, play around with the genes, clone this, clone that, live to one hundred and fifty โ€“ at some point, life is over. And then what happens? When the life comes to an end? I shrugged. You see? He leaned back. He smiled. When you come to the end, that's where God begins.
by Mitch Albom
Small towns are like metronomes; with the slightest flick, the beat changes.
by Mitch Albom
You say you should have died instead of me. But during my time on earth, people died instead of me, too. It happens every day. When lightning strikes a minute after you are gone, or an airplane crashes that you might have been on. When your colleague falls ill and you do not. We think such things are random. But there is a balance to it all. One withers, another grows. Birth and death are part of a whole.
by Mitch Albom
we get so many lives between birth and death. A life to be a child. A life to come of age. A life to wander, to settle, to fall in love, to parent, to test our promise, to realize our mortality-and, in some lucky cases, to do something after that realization.
by Mitch Albom
But an ink brush, she thinks, is a skeleton key for a prisoner's mind.
by David Mitchell
Where there's bluster, thinks Luisa, there's duplicity
by David Mitchell