Tuesday 8 September 2015


Alice’s Bloody Adventures in Wonderland
by
Raul Contreras








About:

A new demented modern interpretation of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. With illustrations by Los Angeles based street artist Tweedle Guns. The White Rabbit has killed Alice's Sister and cat. Sending her on a revenge quest down the rabbit hole. Alice finds herself a pawn in a deadly battle for supremacy of Wonderland.

‘Alice’s Bloody Adventures in Wonderland:’ Book Review:


To see the work of street artist Tweedle Guns in the Alice Art Blog please click <> HERE <>












United States






Wednesday 2 September 2015


Lewis Carroll Information - Downloads






1982 - George MacDonald and Lewis Carroll 

by R.B. Shaberman






1984 - Lewis Carroll as a Probabilist and Mathematrician 

by E. Seneta






1999 - Lewis Carroll Wonderlands: Utopia and Heterotopia in Alive's Adventures in Wonderland

by Christina Ferreira Laterza






2005 The Neurology of Alice

By Andrew Larner






2007 - Synaptic Boojums: Lewis Carroll, Linguistic Nonsense, and Cyberpunk

by Jennifer Kelso Farrell






2008 - Charles Lutwidge Dodgson

by Erin Reeves






2008 - Looking-Glass Reflections - Norms in translating Lewis Carroll

by Alice Martin






2009 - On a Probability Problem of Lewis Carroll

by Nicholas Vakhania






2010 - Playing Around in Lewis Carroll’s Alice Books

by Jan Susina






2011 - 3E Lewis Carroll Puzzles

by The University of Hawaii






2011 - Alice in Wonderland: Development of Alice’s Identity within Adaptations

Finn-Henning Johannessenbr






2012 - Epic Alice: Lewis Carroll and the Homeric Tradition

by Alyssa Caswell Mimbs






2014 - Lewis Carroll & Alice

by Callum James Books






2015 - Lewis Carroll, Education and the Teaching of Geometry in Victorian England

by Rafael Montoito






A Conversation with Lewis Carroll

by Ezra Brown






Alice’s Vacillation between Childhood and Adolescence in Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland

by Jenny Karlsson






Can You Make Sense of This Well Known Poem?

Andrew Clements






Chapter 1 - Introduction






Lewis Carroll Political Economist

by Mary Ann Dimand






Staging Childhood: Lewis Carroll's Costumed Photographs of Children






The Musical






Monday 31 August 2015


American cover of The Mystery of Lewis Carroll
by
Jenny Woolf



The American cover.

The cover of the US edition of the book. There's something a bit funny about his right hand. A form of photoshop arthritis?









If you are here via the Featured Artist's links please click Older posts twice to see Jenny's other work in this Blog:


The UK cover of The Mystery of Lewis Carroll
by
Jenny Woolf



The English cover.

Someone wondered what he was holding in it. It's a camera lens, the sort that goes on the type of big brass and mahogany plate camera that he used. He is apparently polishing it with a cloth. The photo was taken by the celebrated Rejlander, whom Carroll consulted when building his own photographic studio.









Lewis Carroll In his own account
by
Jenny Woolf




LEWIS CARROLL IN HIS OWN ACCOUNT: THE COMPLETE BANK ACCOUNT OF THE REV. C.L. DODGSON [ Edited with Notes and an Introduction by Jenny Woolf ] Paperback – 2005












Hampstead, London - United Kingdom






Monday 24 August 2015

Friday 21 August 2015


Alice I Have Been by Melanie Benjamin










Read An excerpt








Chicago - United States









I would like to thank Melanie for kindly allowing me to include details of her work in the Alice Blogs.

Sunday 16 August 2015


Wonderland Revisited and the Games Alice Played There - 2009







The more she thought about it, the more convinced Alice became. Her bed had not been moving when she got in to it. She could clearly remember Dinah jumping up to wish her good night. "She really is such a clumsy cat," Alice thought. "I am sure she could never have managed it if my bed had been bobbing about like a cork on a pond. It’s not as if it’s the sort of thing one could easily be mistaken about. Perhaps if beds stayed still some nights and bobbed up and down on others, one could be forgiven, once in a while, for forgetting which sort of night it was; but beds don’t behave like that."




There were other things wrong too. Alice could hear birds singing and feel a soft warm breeze blowing against her face – as if in a meadow on a summer’s day. That’s not at all right when you’re supposed to be tucked up in bed in the middle of the night.

Alice often found problems easier to solve if she kept her eyes tight shut, but this was not one of those times. There was nothing else for it. She was going to have to open her eyes and take a look.

"Well, that really is… How totally extraordinary," exclaimed Alice. "Not at all what I had expected."

READ MORE:







A note on Carrollean spellings.

This page is for the purists...

You may be surprised to see words like "can't" spelled out as "ca'n't" in Wonderland Revisited.... You may even think you've spotted the odd spelling mistake, like "traveling".

Well, it is an odd spelling, I'll grant you, but not a mistake. Wonderland Revisited and the Games Alice Played There deliberately uses Lewis Carroll's own conventions with regard to spelling and punctuation.

The approach is best described by the following extract from Carroll's own preface to Sylvie and Bruno.

Other critics have objected to certain innovations in spelling, such as "ca’n’t", "wo’n’t", "traveler". In reply, I can only plead my firm conviction that the popular usage is wrong. As to "ca’n’t", it will not be disputed that, in all other words ending in "n’t", these letters are an abbreviation of "not"; and it is surely absurd to suppose that, in this solitary instance, "not" is represented by "‘t"! In fact "can’t" is the proper abbreviation for "can it", just as "is’t" is for "is it". Again, in "wo’n’t", the first apostrophe is needed, because the word "would" is here abridged into "wo": but I hold it proper to spell "don’t" with only one apostrophe, because the word "do" is here complete.

As to such words as "traveler", I hold the correct principle to be, to double the consonant when the accent falls on that syllable; otherwise to leave it single. This rule is observed in most cases (e.g. we double the "r" in "preferred", but leave it single in "offered"), so that I am only extending, to other cases, an existing rule. I admit, however, that I do not spell "parallel", as the rule would have it; but here we are constrained, by the etymology, to insert the double "l".

Lewis Carroll

So there! I claim to be picking up the pen where Carroll put it down so the least I can do is wield it in the same way. Who am I to argue with one so revered?












Wokingham, Berkshire - United Kingdom




"Wonderland Revisited and the Games Alice Played There," Available from Amazon and all retail outlets or ask Keith for a signed copy.

Readers from other geographical regions, please email Keith for a quote at the link below, specifying your country and currency







I would like to thank Keith for kindly allowing me to include details of his work in the Alice Blogs.


Adventures in Hiveland
by
Frank Stevens



1903




  Book Download - Internet Archive  




Down the Snow Stairs
by
Alice Corkran



1896




  Book Download - Internet Archive  




Speaking Likenesses
by
Christina Georgina Rossetti






  Book Download - Internet Archive  

  Christina Georgina Rossetti - Wikipedia