‘Curiouser and curiouser!’ On a hot, sunny day Alice sees a rabbit in a waistcoat and follows it into a large hole. With this, Alice goes spiralling down into a fantastical land of very strange creatures - talking White Rabbit, a Frog-Footman, smiling Cheshire Cat, hookah-smoking Caterpillar, Mad Hatter and, of course, the cruel Queen. A land where Alice can be three inches or nine feet tall with just a gulp of a ‘curious’ drink or a bite of a mushroom; a place where everything and anything is possible . But where is this strange land? And will Alice ever get out of this mysterious place and go back to the real world? Alice in Wonderland is a classic book for all ages as Lewis Carroll blends imagination and word-play to create a world of wonders.
Alice in wonderland is a children's book written by Lewis Carroll. I read its adaptation by Subhojit Sanyal. I think most of us would have read some part of this book in school and dreamed of going to the strange places where Alice went. I would recommend it to adults as well because it is a funny, illogical, magical and a curious book. You would not know where and in which trouble Alice would land next. It is such a great couple of hours out of the busy and tensed lives of adulthood. Here, is a little poem about how I felt about Alice and her wonderland.
Alice sees a dreamland Inside a rabbit hole She grows into a giant Then shrienks into a doll
She talks to a Rabbit who wears a watch and coat She is stuck as a culprit In a cruel queen's court
It is a curious place Sometimes scary too Is it all real or not Alice has no clue
All grey cells of the brain Get painted red and yellow Hop in the this book Let your imagination grow