![]() ![]() Under the joint title Alice in Wonderland, they have delighted children and scholars ever since. During the course of the outing he made up a story about the adventures of one of the little girls, Alice, after she fell down a rabbit hole into a strange land where she met talking animals, living playing cards, and creatures out of nursery rhymes - a story he later turned into one of the great classics of English literature, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (1865), published under the pseudonym "Lewis Carroll." Several years later he wrote a sequel, or more properly companion piece, Through the Looking Glass (1871), in which Alice steps through a mirror into a topsy-turvey world inspired by the game of chess. A shy Oxford mathematician whose favorite hobbies were photography, befriending little girls, and writing nonsense verse took three of his boss’s daughters on a picnic. Dungeonland and The Land Beyond the Magic Mirror Introduction by John D. ![]() ![]() ![]() Dungeonland and The Land Beyond the Magic Mirrorĭ&D Home What is D&D? Products Previews Game Rules Articles Art Gallery Downloads Archives Character Sheets Glossary HelpĮberron Forgotten Realms D&D Miniatures RPGA Message Boards Chat RoomsĮX1-2. ![]()
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