Guiding the reader through the period surrounding the production of Carroll's best-known works, this book contains extracts from his letters to family, friends and colleagues, to Alice Liddell, the inspiration behind the original "Alice", and to other young girls he befriended, to his illustrator, Tenniel, and to eminent writers and artists such as Tennyson and Rossetti. Excerpts from Carroll's diaries, plus many of his own photographic portraits, give further insights into this complex man, while the illustrations, which include many of his own photographs, suggest the visual sources that might have fired his imagination and depict the Victorian world in which he lived.
The Reverend Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, better known by the pen name Lewis Carroll, was an English author, mathematician, logician, Anglican clergyman and photographer.
His most famous writings are Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and its sequel Through the Looking-Glass as well as the poems "The Hunting of the Snark" and "Jabberwocky", all considered to be within the genre of literary nonsense.
Oxford scholar, Church of England Deacon, University Lecturer in Mathematics and Logic, academic author of learned theses, gifted pioneer of portrait photography, colourful writer of imaginative genius and yet a shy and pedantic man, Lewis Carroll stands pre-eminent in the pantheon of inventive literary geniuses.
As a huge Lewis Carroll fan, I absolutely loved Looking-Glass Letters. This collection of Carroll’s personal correspondence gives such a vivid glimpse into his mind—his humor, his wordplay, and even his more serious, intellectual side. Reading his letters feels like stepping into Wonderland in a different way, but this time, through the real thoughts of the man who created it.
Some letters are playful and filled with the same kind of clever nonsense that makes Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland so special, while others show his deep curiosity about the world. It’s fascinating to see how he interacted with children, friends, and colleagues, always blending kindness with sharp wit.
This book is a must-read for anyone who wants to see a more personal side of Lewis Carroll.
I liked this very much. The illustrations and images that were included were excellent choices. I couldn’t help but read some of the letters with a hint of disgust. Even if Carroll’s intentions were pure, the way he worded things to his “child-friends” gave me the willies and made me doubt the purity of his intentions.
In his Lewis Carroll: Looking-Glass Letters, Thomas Hinde gives a nice summation of Lewis Carroll's life, though far less in depth than the Bakewell biography. As such this isn't a work that should be read as the definitive source of information on Lewis Carroll, then again, that isn't what the book sets out to do. Instead the book gives us glimpses of the complicated man that was Lewis Carroll, through letters and diary entries. While it does give us a window into Carroll's inner life, at the end of the book Carroll is still a mystery and the reader as only encountered the tiniest fraction of the facets to the man's personality.
A plus of the book is the large number of illustrations, not just drawings but also paintings and photographs. They provide further background to locations described in the book, gives some of the people mentioned faces and shows us what photography, the medium closed to Carroll's heart next to writing, looked like in the late nineteenth century. We also see the different iterations of the Alice illustrations, both by Carroll himself and the official illustrator, John Tenniel.
The letters and diary fragments are certainly interesting, if at times a little random. While the letters in the sections regarding his early school life and his academic career are mostly relevant and to the point, the letters and fragments included in the later sections are sometimes not as relevant to the subject, or the point they are meant to illustrate isn't really clear. This is a shame as it can be a little distractive from the narrative flow, if you can speak of such in a work of non-fiction.
In my opinion, while the author takes no overt stance on the matter, the issue of Carroll's little girl friendsis treated in an ambivalent manner. On the one hand the tone of the Carroll letters to little girls is mostly avuncular, on the other hand when the matter of Carroll's nude photography is discussed, the author posits that Lewis must have derived some pleasure from it. While this is no more explicit than any of Bakewell's remarks, the contrast of the author's remarks and the selected letters, to me, is rather marked.
In all, it's an entertaining read, which serves as a look into Carroll's inner world and as a nice addition to the information I found in the Bakewell biography. However, if you're really looking to learn about Lewis Carroll, I'd recommend reading the Bakewell.
So, I read this one quite a time ago, but still, it continues with one more magical world in the other side of the mirror. Alice in wonderland was based on a card game, this one goes all they way with chess, the characters, the world, the way the story develops, it just awsome xD