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Commemorating the 150th anniversary of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland with a deluxe oversized hardcover edition, illustrated in full color by Anna Bond of Rifle Paper Co. 'That curious, hallucinating heroine Alice, friend of Cheshire cats and untimely rabbits, is turning 150 years old. But she doesnโt look a day over a decade in a special new edition of Lewis Carrollโs Aliceโs Adventures in Wonderland . . . And what a perfect match, in tone and whimsy, found in Rifle Paper Co.โs Anna Bond, who has illustrated every page of the book."-- Vanity Fair It's been 150 years since Lewis Carroll introduced Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, the story which has become a favorite of children and adults the world over. Now, in a deluxe hardcover edition from Puffin, Alice's story comes to life for a whole new generation of readers through the colorful, whimsical artwork of Anna Bond, best known as the creative director and artistic inspiration behind the worldwide stationery and gift brand Rifle Paper Co. Lose yourself in Alice's story as she tumbles down the rabbit hole, swims through her own pool of tears, and finds herself in a rather curious place called Wonderland. There, she'll encounter the frantic White Rabbit, have a frustrating conversation with an eccentric caterpillar, and play croquet with the hot-headed Queen of Hearts. Follow Alice on her wild adventure through the eyes of the artist in this definitive gift edition. Review: Such a vibrant, fun, activity pop up book! - Gorgeous book w artistry, activity pop outs. Obsessed! Review: Exceeds expectations - Beautifully illustrated hard back book. This is a larger book than I expected. Excited to gift it!



C**E
Such a vibrant, fun, activity pop up book!
Gorgeous book w artistry, activity pop outs. Obsessed!
A**R
Exceeds expectations
Beautifully illustrated hard back book. This is a larger book than I expected. Excited to gift it!
K**S
Imaginative Landmark Piece of Literature!
Walt Disney's animation Alice in Wonderland is one of my favorite films and since childhood, seeing other adaptations along the way, I've always had a sort of attachment to Alice, her adventures and the equally quirky characters she meets. But it dawned on me I have never owned a copy of the original story! When I saw this book with all its whimsical art and charming interpretation, I KNEW I had to have it! Such fabulous care is taken to illustration of the iconic characters and I love the large print for the font, the size of the hardcover and the pages feel great, not thin. The designs for the slipcover and hardcover are gorgeous and I feel a good balance in the artwork from what we as the audience are used to seeing to these unique style choices. I only wish Dinah would've been illustrated, I didn't see her but I may be mistaken. Also, my book arrived in excellent condition! However, I wish Amazon would still take better care of books by placing them in a plastic covering with better protection.
J**N
Alice's Adventures In Wonderland; a Comorbid Dream Through Reframing
Alice in Lewis Carrol's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland is dreaming and there is no way for me as a reader to tell what physical abilities she may have while awake; could Alice have a physical disability? Could Aliceโs dream be so vivid because she is also Autistic? As an Autistic reader with Cerebral Palsy, I think yes, in this essay, I will interpret Alice as physically disabled and Autistic. There are some passages that I find interesting as they seem to be confirming my theory. Thinking about getting into the garden requires a certain amount of steps, which can be a problem for autistic girls. Alice has to find the key, then shrink down, but instead shrinks without taking the key with her, because of this Alice has a meltdown crying over not being able to get into the garden. Alice and I both have a strong intellect, which is part of being Autistic for females and Alice thinks deep thoughts She thinks about how far she's fallen, she thinks about how to get into the garden, math, geography, and poetry the typical way we measure intellect, and she thinks in patterns. For Math, she thinks โFor times five. Is twelve and four times six is thirteenโ Now this could be that numbers bring ease to someone who is Autistic because this is a math concept called base-ten notation. For Geography, the pattern is โLondon is the Capital of Paris and Paris is the capital of Romeโ Autistic can also get confused. When Alice meets the mouse in chapter two โThe Pool of Tears,โ She says โOu est mon Chatteโ The mouse of course replies โWould you like cats if you were me?โ this an Autistic lack of regard for social norms The way the Caucus Race Lewis Carroll described The Caucus Race is "All the party were placed along the course here and there. There was no 'One, two, three, and away' but they began running when they liked and left off when they liked..." at last, the Dodo said everybody has won, and all must have prizes.'' As a player of adapted sports, this attitude is not nonsensical but quite normal, as these are often the rules in adapted sports that are less intense for disabled people. Afterward, Alice talks about her cat Dinah again, causing the animals to leave for all are the prey of cats. Alice does not seem to have a thought-filer, she says what's on her mind, and is outspoken, even to the point where it disrupts her ability to have a conversation, typical autistic behavior. Alice like in the previous chapter is overwhelmed and has a meltdown, crying. When sent to the White Rabbitโs house to get gloves, she impulsively drinks something she knows will change her size without thinking of the consequences. Impulsivity is also part of being autistic. When the Caterpillar tells her โOne side will make you grow taller, and the other side will make you grow shorter.โ she asks for clarification, things need to be very clear for autistic girls to understand. Alice says to the bird, I have tasted eggs, certainly,โ said Alice, who was a very truthful child; โbut little girls eat eggs quite as much as serpents do, you know.โ Autistic girls are honest, almost to a fault. (They can lie.) Alice also struggles to hold the Duchess' pig-baby. It says "... Kept doubling itself up and straightening itself out again, so that altogether, for the first minute or two, it was as much as she could do to hold it." I've never held a live baby, but since my right arm is weak, it seems logical that I would struggle to do this. At the Mad Tea Party in chapter seven, The Mad Hatter tells her โYour hair wants cuttingโ Alice replies โYou should learn not to make personal remarks,โ Alice said with some severity; โitโs very rude.โ showing an Autistic fondness for rules. She also struggles with holding her flamingo during the game of croquet. It says "The chief difficulty Alice found at first was in managing her flamingo: she succeeded in getting its body tucked away, comfortably enough, under her arm, with its legs hanging down, but generally, just as she had got its neck nicely straightened out, and was going to give the hedgehog a blow with its head, it would twist itself round and look up in her face." The fact that the Queen of Hearts, the villain of the piece, whom the dreaming Alice has created is ableist to the extreme is how the mind of a disabled person like me, would recreate that person in my head. Alice has experienced ableism in real life, and she emotionally processes it through creating this over-the-top situation in her dream. Lewis Carroll only says of the other players that they were "Quarreling," not that they struggled with their flamingos. The duchess when she is in a better mood tells her โWhat a clear way you have of putting things!โ autistic girls can be direct. The Knaveโs trial is a good example of Manipulation, which Alice has trouble with because sheโs autistic. She stands up to the Queen saying โStuff and Nonsense!โ T The Queen of Hearts has a habit of shouting which both people with a Cerebral Palsy Startle reflex and who are autistic have trouble with loud noises, so when the Queen of Hearts shouts โOFF WITH HER HEAD!โ right before the end of Aliceโs dream, itโs no wonder the dream ends abruptly! As a final note, while it does say Alice ran to get to the house at the end of the story, Alice says in "Down The Rabbit Hole" "I shall think nothing of tumbling downstairs! How brave they'll think me at home!" The Line ``How brave they'll think me at home!" implies that this happens more often than it happens to most normally developed children, her Disability may affect some physical abilities and not others. For example, I have the most control over my legs and the least control over my hands, and always have to use a handrail on the stairs There is also how โInvolvedโ the stuff Alice does in Wonderland is, to begin with. The content of Alice's dream represents her ambitions, which for a disabled person can be the simplest things. Most of the stuff done in Wonderland is simple, day-to-day activities. Alice dreams of swimming, eating, drinking, having a race, climbing up and down the stairs, (In the White Rabbit's house) going to a tea party, learning a dance, playing a sport( Croquet), playing fetch with a dog, walking around, talking to people; all given a delightfully bizarre spin by Lewis Carroll; which like the quotes in the paragraph above suggest on a normal day her disability may not let her do the simplest things. The poems being repeated by Alice were based by Lewis Carroll on real poems, and that means Alice is consciously integrating them into her dream like I do today with popular characters and celebrities. This is why I can see myself as Alice rather than just identify with her. Alice's Adventures in Wonderland gave me confidence in my disabled identity. The Caucus Race had the same rules as the adapted sports I was allowed to play, making the fact that they isolated me from my abled-bodied peers easier. in the first two chapters alone. Alice is disturbed by the fact that she can't seem to remember the things she used to know, She says to Caterpillar ``I can't remember the things I used".I have Cerebral Palsy, and the one thing I got praise for more than anything else was being smart. Autistic girls are known to have โDreams that are anxiety-ridden, vivid, complex, and/or precognitive in natureโ I couldn't describe Alice's dream better than Art of Autism if I tried None of the other characters seem to notice Alice is smart, this is because there is a stereotype that the disabled aren't smart. In Alice's Adventures in Wonderland ' the characters doubt or simply ignore Alice's intellect, also we see in these interactions her serious nature, another autistic trait. The Caterpillar tells Alice of her rendition of โYou Are Old Father William'' that โIt was wrong from beginning to end When told by Alice that โThe Earth takes 24 hours to turn around on its axisโ the Duchess replies โTalking of axes, chop off her head!โ The Mad Hatter teases her with โWhy is a raven like a writing desk?โ and then tells her he has no idea what the answer is, to which Alice seriously replies โI think you might do something better with the time, than waste it in asking riddles that have no answers.โ The Mock Turtle and the Griffin let her explain a little bit of her rendition of โTis the Voice of the Sluggard.'' Soon after saying that the poem is too hard for them; Alice is making progress. When she finally gets to prove her intellect, called as a witness at the Knave's trial, says that the evidence โHas not an atom of meaning in it.โ and that sentencing someone first is โStuff and nonsense!โ but the response is โOff with her head!โ Nevertheless, the Queen of Hearts acknowledges that what Alice said makes sense to her, sending the cards upon her, ending her dream, and finally validating her intellect. Alice's Adventures in Wonderland makes me value my intellect, even if I don't consider breaking stereotypes valuable to myself. The fact that Wonderland is a dream provides me with the opportunity to say โI can go on an adventure, and defeat a villain, just like everybody elseโ because Alice isn't doing anything except sleeping! That's why the โIt's only a dreamโ ending can be molded into something beautiful. Alice is dreaming, there's hardly any way to judge what abilities she possesses. Wonderland is more accommodating, requiring no physical feats of daring, just a chance to prove one's intellect. Her physical struggles in Wonderland reflect her physical struggles in real life. Navigating Wonderland lets her figure out how to combat ableism and oppression. The idea that maybe Alice could be like me is a magical and realistic ending for intelligent, imaginative, and adventurous children like me and Alice.
S**.
Beautiful Book!
Very beautiful book! The illustrations and interactive elements are just stunningโฆeverything seems pretty sturdy and not super rip resistantโฆthe book came wrapped in plastic and in mint conditionโฆdefinitely a very fun book to have!
T**R
Stunning!
Iโm such a MinaLima fangirl and this dos not disappoint! A beautiful book to add to my collection.
B**T
wow this is art work.
wow !!!!! I'm so excited! As a dyslexic adult ive found it hard to read many of these classics , but the text and all the beautiful illustrations on every page make it alot easier ! I love love , AND i think will order some others as well for gifts and myself !
G**.
Fab book for 4yrs
Great grown up book for 4yr old.
L**A
Wunderschรถn
Einfach wundervoll, die ganze Aufmachung, die wunderschรถnen Bilder, die Extras und die Geschichte an sich. Auch der Buchrรผcken ist so schรถn, wenn man das Buch im Bรผcherregal hat. Ich liebe die ganze Reihe!
A**R
The illustrations are magnificent, ideal for both adults and children
This is a beautiful book. The illustrations are just magnificent and it has so many little features. A beautiful pop up / interactive book for adults & children alike.
J**R
Beautiful images
Small and colorful book
A**A
Hermoso
Me encanta! Viene con protecciones en todas las partes interactivas, y es hermoso y de buenisima calidad
S**L
Very expensive but also VERY beautiful
The story itself needs no reverie but this edition definitely takes it to another level. Thick smooth paper, generous font size, gorgeous and plentiful colour illustrations that bring the story to life. Really, so many illustrations of the madness that happens in the story. My 7 year old loves it and I do too.
Trustpilot
2 months ago
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