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15 Reviews
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17 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Wonderful Wonderland!,
By Jenny Smith "midwestmom" (Chicago, IL) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Princess Alyss of Wonderland (Hardcover)
Please pass it on! Princess Alyss of Wonderland is NOT the 3rd installment of the Looking Glass Wars. It is a scrapbook of the lost art and letters of Princess Alyss while she was a little girl living in exile in London and meant to give fans of the series even more to mull over. I had seen the cover art for this and was waiting for the book because I knew my 6-year-old would love it. We had a wonderful time going through the book together and discovering all the hidden extras and card game(!) and fun but it wasn't until I sat and read it on my own that I realized how it worked for adults as well. The narrator is a historian who guides the reader through the whole probability of this really having occurred - it's a fully formed factual basis that adds up to support the premise that Alyss was REALLY a princess from Wonderland. Visually the kids will love it - but adults get something to wrap their heads around as well. Beautiful job.
midwestmom
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great Scrapbook!,
This review is from: Princess Alyss of Wonderland (Hardcover)
This is a well-crafted scrapbook with some beautiful artwork. It is an excellent companion piece to Frank Beddor's Looking Glass Wars trilogy (it is NOT the third book of the trilogy as one review here erroneously states). If you like those books and/or the Hatter M. graphic novel spin-off, Princess Alyss of Wonderland provides additional backstory (or "evidence") in a visually entertaining manner. A fun read.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
More Ancillary than Necessary,
By
This review is from: Princess Alyss of Wonderland (Hardcover)
This book adds very little to the Beddor and Alyss Heart universe. However, it is wonderfully crafted and helps continue the mystique that Beddor is creating that Alyss was a real person trapped in Victorian England. It fills in a few gaps of her stay in England, but it is not necessary to read in order to understand The Looking Glass Wars or Queen Redd. The Hatter M comic books do far more for the overall storyline.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
great book,
This review is from: Princess Alyss of Wonderland (Hardcover)
I gave this book to my wife for christmas, (she is a big fan of the looking glass wars) and its now a week later and she is still flipping through it. It was a great purchase
6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Courtesy of Teens Read Too,
By TeensReadToo "Eat. Drink. Read. Be Merrier." (All Over the US & Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Princess Alyss of Wonderland (Hardcover)
I fell in love with Frank Beddor's Alyss Hart in The Looking Glass Wars. If you're a fan of the story, then you'll be impressed with this scrapbook, which includes beautiful illustrations, fun little cards, pull-out flaps, and more.
Don't come into PRINCESS ALYSS OF WONDERLAND looking for a lot more information on the story, though. This is a companion of sorts to Frank Beddor's story of Alyss, Hatter Madigan, Dodge Anders, The Cat, the city of Wonderland, and Redd. It's a beautifully designed compendium of letters to and from Alyss and journal type entries, but doesn't tell you a lot more than what you already learned in the first book. But if you put it together with The Looking Glass Wars and Seeing Redd (The Looking Glass Wars), the second book in the series, this is a fine addition to your library. Reviewed by: Jennifer Wardrip, aka "The Genius"
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Will delight most little girls as well as give them a glimpse into life in mid-1800s Britain,
By A Customer (New York, NY) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Princess Alyss of Wonderland (Hardcover)
As if the original, colorful tale of ALICE'S ADVENTURES IN WONDERLAND and its sequel --- or the countless film and theater adaptations of it --- weren't enough to delight anyone old or young enough to read or be read to, "historian emeritus Agnes MacKenzie" has found the journal of the real little girl who inspired Lewis Carroll's classic.
Read, in Alyss's own words, how one birthday went terribly, horrifyingly wrong, and she and Hatter Madigan escaped the chaos by jumping off a cliff into the Pool of Tears. Alyss ended up standing alone in a strange world called London, and that's where it all began. After a stint as a street urchin, Alyss went to an orphanage and was adopted by the Liddell family. That is where she met the author/reverend/mathematician Charles Dodgson, who became known to the world as Lewis Carroll. Mr. Dodgson was the only person who would call our heroine by her true name, Princess Alyss Heart (the awfully unimaginative Liddells rechristened her a boring "Alice"). He took an interest in Alyss and her adoptive sisters, and soon he had written a story about Alyss that would keep readers captivated for decades to come. That's where everything went wrong. Alyss was indignant when she read Mr. Dodgson's story, as it mentioned silly things like rabbit holes and made no indication that Alyss, not Alice, was a princess. Luckily we have the rest of her journal here to set us all straight. PRINCESS ALYSS OF WONDERLAND shines not in its blatant retelling (with lots of poetic license) of a classic story, but in its incredible delivery. It is a gem of a book, with real photographs of Dodgson and the Liddell sisters as well as imaginative drawings and letters in envelopes to pull out and read, as in the Jolly Postman series. Alyss is a new Eloise, with a bright outlook on even the darkest things. The only place where the book falters is in its sometimes needless notes from the "historian" who discovered Alyss's diary when they attempt to prompt what is next to come in the story. This is a fragile book that needs to be taken care of (be especially mindful of how you unfold the Oxford map), but it will delight most little girls as well as give them a glimpse into life in mid-1800s Britain. The biggest danger is its rewriting of history and of a classic children's book that shouldn't be tampered with. With that taken into consideration, however, this is a lovely story of a vivacious little girl fighting not to lose her imagination and trying to find her place in the world. --- Reviewed by Hannah Gómez
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
WONDERFUL IN WONDERLAND,
By
This review is from: Princess Alyss of Wonderland (Hardcover)
THis book is filled with more tricks and moveable pictures than a 5 year old can play with. its fantastically presented starting from the cover all the way to the deck of cards in the back pocket.
certainly a wonderful addition to a book collection -4 thumbs up-
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Opps,
This review is from: Princess Alyss of Wonderland (Hardcover)
I returned this book it wasn't what I wanted --I like several others thought it was the the next book --guess I should have read the reviews before ordering.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great book,
By
This review is from: Princess Alyss of Wonderland (Hardcover)
My seven year old loves this book since, as she says "it is full of treasures". I can't but agree with my daughter's review since this book is so rich of details and wonderful illustrations it can be read over and over again with no problems. The only thing I would warn about this book is that is takes a little bit of a dark spin on the classic Alice in Wonderland so some very young readers might not like that
5.0 out of 5 stars
Through the Looking Glass,
By Alexandra Cenni "Poisoned Rationality" (hamilton, nj USA) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: Princess Alyss of Wonderland (Hardcover)
I picked this up when I picked up The Looking Glass Wars that is to say, during New York Comic-Con 2009 when the author spun me a grand tale that had me enchanted. I count myself extremely lucky as this seems very hard to find now!
I'm a fan of those '-ology' books honestly, I like books like that with little hidden messages and interactive things to read and handle. Its a great way to get kids interested. This book doesn't disappoint me at all in that respect. There is nine different little letters and flip open cards to read as well as the beautifully illustrated playing cards to 'Wage the War' in Wonderland. The book itself is written like a diary-scrapbook, meant to be a companion to the series as Alyss jots down what she remembers about Wonderland and doesn't want to forget ever. There are dozens of illustrations throughout the book--some are clearly meant to be 'hand drawn' by Alyss while others are pictures she clipped from places--photos offer a little insight into the time period when she lived in this world. This isn't a book that someone who hasn't read at least the first book should be trolling through, it offers clarification and details about the events, but is not a stand-in for the real thing. Like a real journal the way Alyss describes things are from her viewpoint and perceptions (and this a young girl) so they are colored by her feelings entirely. The book is beautiful, simply put. Whether its for a little girl who loves Alyss or someone like me who's beyond her 20's but still feels enchantment, its a wonderful companion piece. |
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Princess Alyss of Wonderland by Frank Beddor (Hardcover - November 1, 2007)
Used & New from: $4.51
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