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The Story of Alice: Lewis Carroll and the Secret History of Wonderland
The Story of Alice: Lewis Carroll and the Secret History of Wonderland
The Story of Alice: Lewis Carroll and the Secret History of Wonderland
Audiobook15 hours

The Story of Alice: Lewis Carroll and the Secret History of Wonderland

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

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About this audiobook

Following his acclaimed biography of Dickens, Robert Douglas-Fairhurst illuminates the tangled history of two lives and two books. Drawing on numerous unpublished sources, he examines in detail the peculiar friendship between the Oxford mathematician Charles Dodgson (Lewis Carroll) and Alice Liddell, the child for whom he invented the Alice stories, and analyzes how this relationship stirred Carroll's imagination and influenced the creation of Wonderland.

The Story of Alice reveals Carroll as both an innovator and a stodgy traditionalist, entrenched in habits and routines. He had a keen double interest in keeping things moving and keeping them just as they are. (In Looking-Glass Land, Alice must run faster and faster just to stay in one place.) Tracing the development of the Alice books from their inception in 1862 to Liddell's death in 1934, Douglas-Fairhurst also provides a keyhole through which to observe a larger, shifting cultural landscape: the birth of photography, changing definitions of childhood, murky questions about sex and sexuality, and the relationship between Carroll's books and other works of Victorian literature.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateMay 24, 2016
ISBN9781515976899

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Rating: 3.666666653333333 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Bias: I played the Mad Hatter in a high school play. I really liked the film 'Dream Child'. In Tokyo I bought Trevor Brown's Alice art books.

    Do I recommend the book, yes or no?: Yes

    Short story: Lots or interpretation, some speculation, but enough facts to make the first two forgivable. A biography of two people, the author and the subject.

    BOOK REVIEW

    Narration: 5/5 I am fond of the narrator's unique rhythm. 90% would be an ideal speed for my old brain.

    Writing: 3.5/5 No complaints though his sentences are so long and contextual my bookmarks were really for paragraphs. Not a visual writer, never the less engaging.

    Content: 3/5 Thorough to the extreme.

    Learned: Details about the book's publication over the decades, its imitators and pirated versions; CDL's personality (which seems to me was sexually repressed and probably obsessive) and the complicated relationship between CDL and Alice (and especially her family).

    Strong points: Date-specific -- on date X such and such happened; a story of changes -- personal, interpersonal and cultural; as much about the book's success as the lives of Alice Liddle and CDL; avoids the usual guesswork about what CDL's erotic mind-set was; history of ages of consent and Victorian attitudes about children.

    Weak points: Book could have been half the length and just as good; I learned more about publishing, advertising, social and cultural context and 19th and 20th century commercial exploitation of the Alice mystique than I wanted to know.

    Spoiler: Alice turned into a middle-class housewife and her son marketed her appearances in her old age.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    If this book has a unifying theme, it's a bit like the Cheshire Cat: You don't know where it will appear, or how much of it.Timed to appear in the hundred and fiftieth anniversary year of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, it has a little bit of everything: a bit of biography of Charles Dodgson (Lewis Carroll), a bit of literary criticism of his work, a little bit about Alice Liddell (the "real Alice"), and a substantial amount about the influence of the Alice books.It strikes me as a stretch on several counts. As far as the biographic aspects are concerned, it breaks little new ground, even though there is still new ground to be broken (if nothing else, there is a point that I keep harping on: that Dodgson was autistic, and that most of his strange behaviors can be understood by understanding autism, and that they cannot be understood if one ignores it). The biographical details on Alice are even more disappointing; there is little that cannot be found in the better biographies of Dodgson (she lived in Oxford, she probably fell in love with Queen Victoria's youngest son Leopold, she married rich-but-not-very-bright Reginald Hargreaves, she had three sons, two of whom died in World War I, she lost her husband, she was "rediscovered" when she sold the manuscript of Alice's Adventures, she died in her eighty-second year). Alice Liddell was an impressive woman in her own right, which probably helps explain why she inspired Dodgson, and that just doesn't come out here.Still, this doesn't claim to be a biography of either of the two key characters. It's about "Wonderland." This is the part that somewhat bothers me. There were, in Dodgson's life and beyond, a great many "Alice" tie-ins -- but Douglas-Fairhurst often ignores these to concentrate on things with, at best, the most dubious connections with Wonderland. There is very little examinations of the translations of Alice, e.g., except for Vladimir Nabokov's. The stage versions are mentioned, but there is little discussion of what they were like. Instead, we get vague references to odd sorts of fantasies with characters named "Alice."Don't get me wrong; this is a thoroughly readable book which will teach many people much that they did not know about Dodgson, Alice, and "Alice." But I'm truly not sure what it's trying to demonstrate, and I don't think a true Alice fan -- the kind who has already read Morton Cohen's and Anne Clark's biographies of Dodgson, and can quote whole stanzas of The Hunting of the Snark, and who knows what the "Liddell Riddle" is all about -- will find much here.