đ A Book That Changed Stories Forever
On July 4, 1865, a very special book was published in England. It was called âAliceâs Adventures in Wonderlandâ, written by Lewis Carroll. This wasnât just any storyâit was a strange, silly, and magical tale about a little girl named Alice who falls down a rabbit hole and ends up in a land full of talking animals, mad tea parties, and very curious things.
This book became one of the most famous childrenâs stories in the worldâand itâs still loved today!
đ§ What Makes It So Special?
Alice’s story isnât like other stories. Itâs filled with imagination and surprises. One moment, Alice is shrinking small. The next, sheâs growing tall. She meets a grinning cat, a Queen who yells âOff with their heads!â, and a White Rabbit in a hurry.
Even though the story is silly, it also makes us think about growing up, being brave, and figuring out who we are. Thatâs what makes it so specialâit’s fun, but it also means something.
đš The Art of Wonderland
The original drawings in the book were made by Sir John Tenniel. These black-and-white pictures helped readers imagine the world of Wonderlandâand theyâre still famous today! If you’ve seen a drawing of the Mad Hatter or the Cheshire Cat, it might be one of Tenniel’s.
đ€© Get this!
- Lewis Carroll wrote the story for a real girl named Alice Liddell. He gave her a handwritten copy as a gift!
- The book has been turned into movies, plays, ballets, and cartoonsâeven by Disney in 1951 and Tim Burton in 2010.
- In 1969, the famous artist Salvador DalĂ made his own set of strange, dreamy pictures for the story!
- Some of the bookâs words and phrasesâlike âmad as a hatterâ and âcuriouser and curiouserââare still used today!
- Does “Off with their head” sound familiar
đ Why July 4 Still Matters
Even though it was published long ago, âAliceâs Adventures in Wonderlandâ is still read, loved, and shared all over the world. It reminds us that itâs okay to be curious, to imagine wild things, and to question whatâs ânormal.â
So on July 4, we donât just think about fireworks and summerâwe also celebrate the day a brave little girl followed a rabbit and found a world of wonder.


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