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1

ALICE

ALICE IN WONDERLAND PARTY BOOK
CARROLL,Lewis

Edición: 1996
Formato: PAPERBACK
Páginas: 24
Tamaño: 23 x 32cm.
Peso: 0.1750Kg.
ISBN: 9780333640500
Editorial: PAN MACMILLAN

Precio: $ 42.00

Descripción:

"It's always tea-time," said the Hatter. Have your own Mad Hatter's Tea Party! Invite your friends and give them each a mask. Follow the recipies, play the games and you too can be part of the most famous tea party in the world! • Includes four press-out masks (Alice, The March Hare, The Hatter, and the Dormouse)


Acerca del Autor: Lewis Carroll (1832-98). Author of two of the bestknown and best-loved children's books ever written, Lewis Carroll is also remembered for his neologisms and nonsense rhymes. Lewis Carroll is the pseudonym of Charles Lutwidge Dodgson. He arrived at this pseudonym by translating his two first names back into English from Latin and reversing their order. Born the eldest of eleven children, he showed an early aptitude for writing and edited his own magazines to entertain the family. He was educated at Rugby soon after the school had been re-organized under Dr.Arnold and then at Christ Church, Oxford. He became mathematical lecturer at the same college from 1855 until his retirement in 1881. He was ordained as a clergyman in 1861, but held no benefice and rarely preached. He was a shy man who was handicapped by a stammer; his self-consciousness was lessened only in the presence of children, especially girls. Alice Liddell, second of the three young daughters of the Dean of Christ Church, was the greatest among these 'child friends'. On 4 July 1862 he and another took the sisters out boating, and Dodgson entertained his audience with a story which he called 'Alice's Adventures Underground'. This was to appear in print in 1865 as 'Alice's Adventures in Wonderland', accompanied by Sir John Tenniel's atmospheric illustrations. It was followed by 'Through the Looking Glass' (1872), relating the further adventures of Alice with pictures by the same illustrator. He also published the mock-heroic poem 'The Hunting of the Snark' (1876) and more sentimental 'Sylvie and Bruno' (1889). At the same time he was also the author of several mathematical treatises, of which the most influential was 'Euclid and his Modern Rivals' (1879). Queen Victoria was bemused, rather than amused, to recieve one of these, when after the success of the Alice books she gave him an audience and requested that Dodgson send her his next publication.

   
 
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