Monday, April 26, 2010

First Impression

This book is absolute unbelievable and creative to the point where we have a rabbit talking, like I mean a kind of idea inside of a human mind. Overall, I read the first 50 pages so far and I think it’s really getting somewhere where things get more dangerous, but it’s hard to follow because some things don’t make sense. The characters that I know so far in the book are Alice, a little girl who puts herself into danger. Then there is a Rabbit, he can talk and nervous and always runs away seeming he has something important to do. Then there is the mouse, this mouse is a little bigger than Alice and is sensitive and scared of creatures in the place “Wonderland”.
Its starts off with Alice chasing the Rabbit and falls into this huge Rabbit Hole, at the end of the Rabbit Hole, she is in a mysterious place leading to lots of doors and the floor is checkered black-white. This gets the reader confused you never seen in your mind the particular area I mentioned in this paragraph. After it gets the reader thinking and want to read more. Alice finds a glass bottle on a table and she drinks it, this product makes her shrink. Then there is a cake that appeared, if you eat it, you grow until your head’s hit the ceiling. The reader is guessing that food from the Wonderland can give you side effects. Alice finds a way out the room of a thousand doors by a trap door leading outside in her shrunk size. She lands in a pool of her tears. This confuses the reader but gets him interested, the world she’s in is a land full of Wonders. She meets a mouse in the pool of tears, this guy is sensitive and gets frighten when you say dogs, or cats in front of him, guess he has past nightmares when he was little. They went to shore and the land has the greenest grass, and mushrooms larger than a human. As you see, the reader can quite picture this in their mind and gets them really thinking what else is going to happen, something out of the ordinary, waiting for mysterious creatures. This book is fantastic and this is great book.

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