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Tove Jansson’s illustrations for a rare 1966 edition of “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland” are melancholy, complex and occasionally scary. Credit... Supported by By Sadie Stein Sadie Stein is an ...
Since childhood, I’ve been completely obsessed with Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through The Looking Glass, and, of course the accompanying animated Disney film. I read Carroll ...
More than 150 years after its publication, Lewis Carroll’s masterpiece stands as one of the most celebrated—and fraught—works in the history of literature. The epic tale of a curious girl who falls ...
The supremacy of Lewis Carroll’s two Alice books—the 1865 “Alice in Wonderland” and its still better successor, “Through the Looking Glass, and What Alice Found There”—among children’s books, and ...
From Salvador Dalí to Kiki Smith, countless artists have followed Alice into Wonderland. As the fantastical coming-of-age tale celebrates a milestone anniversary, what enduring—and revelatory—messages ...
One Rabbit Hole wasn’t big enough to hold all the readers who gathered to discuss the perennially popular children’s classic “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland” by Lewis Carroll. In September, more ...