
Aventuroj de Alicio en Mirlando
A girl named Alice pursues a white rabbit down a hole and tumbles into a world where nothing makes sense. She grows and shrinks at whim, attends a mad tea party, plays croquet with flamingos and soldiers, and witnesses a trial for stolen tarts. The world she discovers, Mirlando, runs on dream logic: answers precede questions, babies transform into pigs, and the only way to stay in place is to run faster and faster. Lewis Carroll, a Victorian mathematician, crafted this tale as much for the adults who would decode its mathematical in-jokes and satirical barbs at education as for the children who simply loved its wonder. The book operates on two levels simultaneously: a child's fantasy of impossible adventures and an adult's meditation on language, absurdity, and the fragility of reason. More than a century and a half later, the book retains its power to make readers feel the vertigo of a world that refuses to follow the rules they thought they knew.








