Best-loved Classics - Alice Through the Looking Glass (Best-loved Classics)

By Retold by Emma Chichester Clark, Original author Carroll, Illustrated by Emma Chichester Clark

The sequel to Alice in Wonderland. Step through the Looking-glass into a topsy-turvy, magical world in this gloriously illustrated picture book re-telling of Lewis Carroll’s enduring classic, from the highly-regarded, prize-winning illustrator of Blue Kangaroo and Melrose and Croc.

(This ebook is optimised for Kindle tablets and the Kindle App. It is not suitable for e-Ink kindle devices, such as the PaperWhite. We recommend you download a sample to your device before purchase if in doubt.)

A LUXURIOUS GIFT BOOK THAT NO CHILD’S LIBRARY SHOULD BE WITHOUT!

In this magnificent sequel to Alice in Wonderland, Alice walks through a mirror straight into the topsy-turvy, back-to-front Looking-glass Kingdom. There she meets a collection of even ‘curiouser’ characters than before; the walrus and the carpenter, Tweedledum and Tweedledee, Humpty Dumpty, the White Knight and the Red Queen, to name but a few. But nothing is quite what it seems…

Format: ebook
Ageband: 4 to 7
Release Date: 12 Dec 2013
Pages: None
ISBN: 978-0-00-753749-5
Emma studied art at the Royal College of Art. She has worked as a freelancer for magazines, publishers and advertising agencies as well as teaching art for several years, but now dedicates most of her time to children’s books

Praise for ‘Alice in Wonderland’: -

“This is a real Alice for the present day, but nonetheless one it is easy to image living the extraordinary adventure Lewis Carroll wrote for her.” Quentin Blake -

“Emma Chichester Clark’s intelligent update of Alice in Wonderland makes it more accessible and less frightening than Lewis Carroll’s original, complete with John Tenniel’s dark, prickly Victorian pictures. Girls of 5+ should enjoy it.” Amanda Craig, The Times -

Praise for ‘Melrose and Croc’:'Full of bright detail, this is a picture book young readers could well dream about as being the next best thing to entering its pages.' The Independent -