Alice Through the Needle's Eye

Alice Through the Needle's Eye
Author: Gilbert Adair
Publisher: Plume
Total Pages: 184
Release: 1988-03-01
Genre: Alphabet
ISBN: 9780525483755

Alice travels through the eye of a needle and meets many unusual creatures including the letters of the alphabet.

Alice Through the Needle's Eye

Alice Through the Needle's Eye
Author: Gilbert Adair
Publisher:
Total Pages: 184
Release: 1985
Genre: Children's stories in English, 1945- - Texts
ISBN: 9780330291583

Vervolg op "Alice in Wonderland" van Lewis Carroll door een bewonderaar en navolger.

The Needle's Eye

The Needle's Eye
Author: Fanny Howe
Publisher: Macmillan
Total Pages: 139
Release: 2016-11
Genre: Literary Collections
ISBN: 1555977561

"The Needle's Eye: Passing through Youth takes the side of the young--boys and girls, doomed and saved--as they weave their ways through ancient and modern times. The Boston Marathon bombers, Francis and Clare of Assisi, legendary nymphs, and urban nomads occupy this sequence of essays, poems, and tales, their stories and chronologies shifting and overlapping."--Back cover.

Alice's Adventures

Alice's Adventures
Author: Will Brooker
Publisher: A&C Black
Total Pages: 412
Release: 2004-01-01
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780826414335

The author of "Batman Unmasked" and "Using the Force", turns his attention to Lewis Carroll and Alice taking the reader through a revealing tour of late 20th Century popular culture, following Alice and her creator wherever they go. The result is an in-depth analysis of how one original creation symbolizes different things to different people.

Alternative Alices

Alternative Alices
Author: Carolyn Sigler
Publisher: University Press of Kentucky
Total Pages: 428
Release: 2014-07-11
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 081314826X

Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland (1865) and Through the Looking Glass (1871) are among the most enduring works in the English language. In the decades following their publication, writers on both sides of the Atlantic produced no fewer than two hundred imitations, revisions, and parodies of Carroll's fantasies for children. Carolyn Sigler has gathered the most interesting and original of these responses to the Alice books, many of them long out of print. Produced between 1869 and 1930, these works trace the extraordinarily creative, and often critical, response of diverse writers. These writers -- male and female, radical and conservative -- appropriated Carroll's structures, motifs, and themes in their Alice-inspired works in order to engage in larger cultural debates. Their stories range from Christina Rossetti's angry subversion of Alice's adventures, Speaking Likenesses (1874), to G.E. Farrow's witty fantasy adventure, The Wallypug of Why (1895), to Edward Hope's hilarious parody of social and political foibles, Alice in the Delighted States (1928). Anyone who has ever followed Alice down the rabbit hole will enjoy the adventures of her literary siblings in the wide Wonderland of the human imagination.

Ill Feelings

Ill Feelings
Author: Alice Hattrick
Publisher: Feminist Press at CUNY
Total Pages: 174
Release: 2022-05-10
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1558614133

An intrepid, galvanizing meditation on illness, disability, feminism, and what it means to be alive. In 1995 Alice’s mother collapsed with pneumonia. She never fully recovered and was eventually diagnosed with ME, or Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. Then Alice got ill. Their symptoms mirrored their mother’s and appeared to have no physical cause; they received the same diagnosis a few years later. Ill Feelings blends memoir, medical history, biography and literary nonfiction to uncover both of their case histories, and branches out into the records of ill health that women have written about in diaries and letters. Their cast of characters includes Virginia Woolf and Alice James, the poets Elizabeth Barrett Browning and Emily Dickinson, John Ruskin’s lost love Rose la Touche, the artist Louise Bourgeois and the nurse Florence Nightingale. Suffused with a generative, transcendent rage, Alice Hattrick’s genre-bending debut is a moving and defiant exploration of life with a medically unexplained illness.

The Quilt Walk

The Quilt Walk
Author: Sandra Dallas
Publisher: Sleeping Bear Press
Total Pages: 220
Release: 2013-04-15
Genre: Juvenile Fiction
ISBN: 1627530169

It's 1863 and 10-year-old Emmy Blue Hatchett has been told by her father that soon their family will leave their farm, family, and friends in Illinois, and travel west to a new home in Colorado. It's difficult leaving family and friends behind. They might not see one another ever again. When Emmy's grandmother comes to say goodbye, she gives Emmy a special gift to keep her occupied on the trip. The journey by wagon train is long and full of hardships. But the Hatchetts persevere and reach their destination in Colorado, ready to start their new life.

Pens and Needles

Pens and Needles
Author: Susan Frye
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
Total Pages: 339
Release: 2011-11-29
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0812206983

The Renaissance woman, whether privileged or of the artisan or the middle class, was trained in the expressive arts of needlework and painting, which were often given precedence over writing. Pens and Needles is the first book to examine all these forms as interrelated products of self-fashioning and communication. Because early modern people saw verbal and visual texts as closely related, Susan Frye discusses the connections between the many forms of women's textualities, including notes in samplers, alphabets both stitched and penned, initials, ciphers, and extensive texts like needlework pictures, self-portraits, poetry, and pamphlets, as well as commissioned artwork, architecture, and interior design. She examines works on paper and cloth by such famous figures as Elizabeth I, Mary, Queen of Scots, and Bess of Hardwick, as well as the output of journeywomen needleworkers and miniaturists Levina Teerlinc and Esther Inglis, and their lesser-known sisters in the English colonies of the New World. Frye shows how traditional women's work was a way for women to communicate with one another and to shape their own identities within familial, intellectual, religious, and historical traditions. Pens and Needles offers insights into women's lives and into such literary texts as Shakespeare's Othello and Cymbeline and Mary Sidney Wroth's Urania.