Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - Ask for a foreign children's literature!

Ask for a foreign children's literature!

Everything upstairs is wrong.

It's Alice in the Mirror, not Wonderland, but two different books.

Lewis carroll (1832 ~ 1898), whose real name was Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, was a mathematician. He has been a mathematics lecturer in the famous Christian College of Oxford University for a long time, and has published several mathematics books. Because of his severe stuttering, he is not good at making friends with people, but he has a wide range of interests, and he is quite accomplished in novels, poems and logic. He is also an excellent child photographer. Alice in Wonderland is the result of his interest. He wrote down the story he told his friend Robinson's daughter Alice, and gave it to her with his own illustrations (this book is handwritten and photocopied in Britain in recent years). Later, with the encouragement of friends, Carol revised, expanded and polished the manuscript, which was officially published in 1865. Carol later wrote a companion piece called "What did Alice find there through the mirror", which was very popular because of Alice in Wonderland. In addition, Carol also wrote poems such as Snake Hunting and Jabberwocky, which are very popular among people.