Zone1 Alice in Wonderland - by Lewis Carroll

I read it when I was a kid.

It would probably be worth reading again from an adult's perspective. I've noticed that with a lot of books.
 
I read it when I was a kid.

It would probably be worth reading again from an adult's perspective. I've noticed that with a lot of books.
you're joking, right?

Your ignorance is astounding..

The world is full of adult references to the story

:auiqs.jpg:
 
you're joking, right?

Your ignorance is astounding..

The world is full of adult references to the story

:auiqs.jpg:
No, I'm not joking, you ******* moron.

Very often when I re-read a book that I read as a child, I notice things I didn't as a 7 year old.

You wouldn't know, because you're obviously not the type who reads books.
 
No, I'm not joking, you ******* moron.

Very often when I re-read a book that I read as a child, I notice things I didn't as a 7 year old.

You wouldn't know, because you're obviously not the type who reads books.
Sadly, your posts here on this topic show that You really are quite dense.

go back and read the previous posts
 
Alice in Wonderland was written as as adult book.

Alice in Wonderland can be read as a political allegory, with Wonderland symbolizing Victorian England and its rigid hierarchies, the tyrannical Queen of Hearts representing Queen Victoria, and the nonsensical legal system of the trial serving as a commentary on the perceived shortcomings of the British justice system and authority. Other interpretations include the novel serving as an allegory for colonization, with Alice embodying a colonizer imposing her values on an unfamiliar culture, or a satire on the Victorian adult world's foolish, arbitrary, and cruel nature, especially in how adults treated children.
 
The author once told the story to a young girl, Alice Liddell.
Later he made a full book of it, with poems.

And still later a second book: Through the Looking Glass.
 
15th post

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