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Books with title Telescopes: Through the Looking Glass

  • Through the Looking Glass

    Lewis Carroll

    language (Digireads.com, March 30, 2004)
    Through the Looking Glass
  • Through the Looking Glass

    Lewis Carroll, Donada Peters, Tantor Audio

    Audible Audiobook (Tantor Audio, Feb. 8, 2007)
    Through the Looking Glass is a sequel of sorts to Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. Alice, now slightly older, walks through a mirror into the Looking-Glass House and immediately becomes involved in a strange game of chess. Soon, she is exploring the rest of the house and meets a sequence of characters now familiar to most: Tweedledum and Tweedledee, the Red Queen, Humpty Dumpty, and the Walrus, to name a few. The popular and linguistically playful poem "Jabberwocky" is also found in Through the Looking Glass.
  • Through the Looking Glass

    Lewis Carroll, Jane Asher, Saland Publishing

    Audible Audiobook (Saland Publishing, Feb. 18, 2010)
    A young Jane Asher stars in this full cast performance of Lewis Carroll's Through The Looking Glass.
  • Through the Looking Glass

    Lewis Carroll, John Tenniel

    Paperback (SeaWolf Press, Jan. 18, 2019)
    A beautiful edition with 50 classic John Tenniel illustrations. Don't be fooled by other versions with missing or made-up pictures.Charles Lutwidge Dodgson wrote this wonderful tale under the pen-name of Lewis Carroll. It was written for Alice Liddell, the daughter of a fellow college professor at the University of Oxford in England and first published in 1871. The full name of the book is Through the Looking Glass, and What Alice Found There. It was a sequel to Carroll's original tale Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. In this new story, Alice climbs through a mirror into a world where everything is reversed. It includes the memorable poems "Jabberwocky" and "The Walrus and the Carpenter", and introduces the unforgettable characters of Tweedledum and Tweedledee.
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  • Through the Looking Glass

    Lewis Carroll

    eBook (Digireads.com, March 30, 2004)
    Through the Looking Glass
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  • Through the Looking Glass

    Lewis Carroll

    language (Digireads.com, March 30, 2004)
    Through the Looking Glass
  • Through the Looking-Glass

    Lewis Carroll

    eBook (Dover Publications, March 1, 2012)
    This 1872 sequel to Lewis Carroll's beloved Alice's Adventures in Wonderland finds the inquisitive heroine in a fantastic land where everything is reversed. Looking-glass land, a topsy-turvy world lurking just behind the mirror over Alice's mantel, is a fantastic realm of live chessmen, madcap kings and queens, strange mythological creatures, talking flowers and puddings, and rude insects.Brooks and hedges divide the lush greenery of looking-glass land into a chessboard, where Alice becomes a pawn in a bizarre game of chess involving Humpty Dumpty, Tweedledum and Tweedledee, the Lion and the Unicorn, the White Knight, and other nursery-rhyme figures. Promised a crown when she reaches the eighth square, Alice perseveres through a surreal landscape of amusing characters that pelt her with riddles and humorous semantic quibbles and regale her with memorable poetry, including the oft-quoted "Jabberwocky."This handsome, inexpensive edition, featuring the original John Tenniel illustrations, makes available to today's readers a classic of juvenile literature long cherished for its humor, whimsy, and incomparable fantasy.
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  • Through the Looking Glass

    Lewis Carroll, John Tenniel

    Paperback (SDE Classics, Sept. 27, 2019)
    And if he left off dreaming about you, where do you suppose you’d be?Adventure, mayhem, and madness continue for young Alice after she climbs through the mirror hanging above her fireplace’s mantel. Into the reflective world she travels, and soon she discovers that just as everything is backward in a mirror’s reflection, so is everything, from backward sentences to backward logic, in the mirror world. Rank by rank, Alice must cross through an enormous chess board as she meets a fantastical motley crew of creatures, chess pieces, and humans alike. What shall happen when little Alice reaches the end of the chess board?Included are 49 John Tenniel illustrations from the original 1871 publication.
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  • Through the Looking-Glass

    Lewis Carroll

    Paperback (Dover Publications, May 14, 1999)
    This 1872 sequel to Lewis Carroll's beloved Alice's Adventures in Wonderland finds the inquisitive heroine in a fantastic land where everything is reversed. Looking-glass land, a topsy-turvy world lurking just behind the mirror over Alice's mantel, is a fantastic realm of live chessmen, madcap kings and queens, strange mythological creatures, talking flowers and puddings, and rude insects.Brooks and hedges divide the lush greenery of looking-glass land into a chessboard, where Alice becomes a pawn in a bizarre game of chess involving Humpty Dumpty, Tweedledum and Tweedledee, the Lion and the Unicorn, the White Knight, and other nursery-rhyme figures. Promised a crown when she reaches the eighth square, Alice perseveres through a surreal landscape of amusing characters that pelt her with riddles and humorous semantic quibbles and regale her with memorable poetry, including the oft-quoted "Jabberwocky."This handsome, inexpensive edition, featuring the original John Tenniel illustrations, makes available to today's readers a classic of juvenile literature long cherished for its humor, whimsy, and incomparable fantasy.
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  • Through the Looking-Glass

    Lewis Carroll, John Tenniel, Axioma

    language (Editorial Axioma, Oct. 16, 2016)
    Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There (1871) is a novel by Lewis Carroll (Charles Lutwidge Dodgson), the sequel to Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (1865). Set some six months later than the earlier book, Alice again enters a fantastical world, this time by climbing through a mirror into the world that she can see beyond it. Through the Looking-Glass includes such celebrated verses as "Jabberwocky" and "The Walrus and the Carpenter", and the episode involving Tweedledum and Tweedledee.
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  • Through the Looking-Glass

    Lewis Carroll

    Hardcover (Pan Macmillan, Sept. 1, 2015)
    Alice's second adventure takes her through the looking glass to a place even curiouser than Wonderland, in this gorgeous hardback gift edition Alice finds herself caught up in the great looking glass chess game and sets off to become a queen. It isn't as easy as she expects: at every step she is hindered by nonsense characters who crop up and insist on reciting poems. Some of these poems, such as "The Walrus and the Carpenter" and "Jabberwocky," are as famous as the Alice stories themselves. Gloriously illustrated with the original line drawings by John Tenniel, plates colored by John Macfarlane, a ribbon marker, and a foreword by Philip Ardagh, this beautiful hardback edition of Lewis Carroll's Through the Looking-Glass, which was first published by Macmillan in 1871, is a truly special gift to treasure.
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  • Through The Looking Glass

    Lewis Carroll

    eBook
    Through The Looking Glass