English poet, Lewis Carroll was an author known merely of his skilled excellence in entertainment towards the young. Lewis also composed a great number of popular literature, such as “Alice in Wonderland”, “Through the Looking-Glass” and “The Hunting of the Snark”. Through Lewis's other work's; his main focus was Alice in Wonderland, due to its ability to force the reader to expect the unexpected and to challenge common sense and reasoning. Alice in Wonderland was published in 1865, by Lewis Carroll and was soon to be a classic children novel in 1876. What was Lewis portraying in his book of nonsense? Lewis wrote this book to escape reality. Why do I believe that? Three very distinctive pieces of Alice in Wonderland, are Alice's passionate desire to escape from reality, Alice's perspective of boredom and the unjust authority by the Queen of Hearts. …show more content…
Sometime in Lewis's 20's, he started poetry, as a means of building his own worlds, which he could then share with others. As a boy, Lewis had 11 siblings which he like to entertain, whether through a smile or poetry. In the book Alice in Wonderland; Alice had a strong ambition to abandon verisimilitude, but soon realized order is a beautiful thing.
Though, Lewis didn't have a reason to depart from reality as a child, he still felt as though things didn't need to be as mundane as they seemed. Alice describes in the beginning of the book as she gazed at her sisters book without pictures and thought “and what is the use of a book without pictures or conversations?” You could say Alice is a reflection of Lewis and his character, as Lewis also had a short attention span. In Lewis's world, objects are not lifeless, nor dull, but rather energetic, enthusiastic and