Summary
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland is Lewis Carroll’s timeless tale of whimsy, curiosity, and imagination.
It follows a young girl, Alice, who tumbles down a rabbit hole into a fantastical world filled with peculiar creatures, shifting logic, and dreamlike adventures.
From her encounters with the White Rabbit, the Cheshire Cat, and the Mad Hatter, to her surreal confrontation with the tyrannical Queen of Hearts, Alice navigates a realm where reason is turned upside down and the impossible becomes everyday.
Blending satire, wordplay, and nonsense, Carroll’s story is both a playful children’s fantasy and a clever commentary on Victorian society and the absurdities of human behavior.