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Alice’s Adventures In Wonderland - Halkkitabevi

Alice’s Adventures In Wonderland

Stok Kodu
9786052492895
Boyut
14x20
Sayfa Sayısı
130
Baskı
1
Basım Tarihi
2021-03
Resimleyen
1ec4fc8ca5bf4c9d84368e5dae45c2b1
Kapak Türü
Ciltsiz
Kağıt Türü
2. Hamur
Dili
İngilizce
95,00TL
%40 İNDİRİM
57,00TL
Taksitli fiyat : 9 x 6,97TL
Stokta var
9786052492895
801587
Alice’s Adventures In Wonderland
Alice’s Adventures In Wonderland
57.00

Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, best known by his pseudonym, Lewis Carroll, was born in the village of Daresbury, England, on January 27,1832. The eldest boy in a family of 11 children, Carroll was rather adept at entertaining himself and his siblings. His father, a clergyman, raised them in the rectory. As a boy, Carroll excelled in mathematics and won many academic prizes. At age 20, he was awarded a studentship (called a scholarship in other colleges) to Christ College. Apart from serving as a lecturer in mathematics, he was an avid photographer and wrote essays, political pamphlets and poetry. "The Hunting of the Snark" displays his wonderful ability in the genre of literary nonsense.

Carroll suffered from a bad stammer, but he found himself vocally fluent when speaking with children. The relationships he had with young people in his adult years are of great interest, as they undoubtedly inspired his best-known writings and have been a point of disturbed speculation over the years. Carroll loved to entertain children, and it was Mice, the daughter of Henry George Liddell, who can be credited with his pinnacle inspiration. Alice Liddell remembers spending many hours with Carroll sitting on his couch while he told fantastic tales of dream worlds. During an afternoon picnic with Alice and her two sisters, Carroll told the first iteration of what would later become Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. When Alice arrived home, she exclaimed that he must write the story down for her.

He fulfilled the small girl's request, and through a series of coincidences, the story fell into the hands of the novelist Henry Kingsley, who urged Carroll to publish it. The book Alice's Adventures in Wonderland was released in 1865. It gained steady popularity, and as a result, Carroll wrote the sequel, Through the Looking-Glass and What Alice Found There (1871). By the time of his death, Mice had become the most popular children's book in England, and by 1932 it was one of the most popular in the world.

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