The Looking Glass Wars (Looking Glass Wars #1) by Frank Beddor: Book Cover
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The Looking Glass Wars (Looking Glass Wars #1) by Frank Beddor

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(Paperback - Reprint)

  • Age Range: Young Adult
  • Pub. Date: August 2007
  • 400pp
  • Sales Rank: 6,234
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    Reader Rating: (93 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Story" See All

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: August 2007
    • Publisher: Penguin Group (USA)
    • Format: Paperback, 400pp
    • Sales Rank: 6,234
    • Age Range: Young Adult

    Synopsis

    The "true story" behind Alice in Wonderland! Princess Alyss Heart is brutally cast out of Wonderland by her vicious Aunt Redd, who beheads Alyss' mother (Off with her head, she cries!) and begins to rule over Wonderland with an iron fist. Alyss escapes from Wonderland and is exiled to another world entirely--Victorian London--where she is adopted into a new family, renamed Alice, and befriended by Lewis Carroll. At age 20 she returns to Wonderland to battle Redd, reclaim the throne, and lead Wonderland into its next golden age of imagination.

    Publishers Weekly

    Narrator Doyle brings to life this fanciful re-imagining of Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. The premise has young Alyss Hart, heiress to the Wonderland throne, chased from the "queendom" in a bloody coup mounted by her despotic Aunt Redd. Alyss escapes through a magical pool to Victorian London. There, no one will listen to her story except for Charles Dodgson (aka Carroll) who publishes his own take. A theater-trained actor, Doyle artfully animates a large and diverse cast of fantasy and real-life characters. He's especially menacing as the murderous Aunt Redd, each high-pitched syllable dripping with malice. At the opposite end of the spectrum, Doyle quietly captures the resignation in Alyss's tender voice as she grows older in exile. For the duty-driven royal bodyguard Hatter Madigan, he colors his delivery with a determined stoicism as he seeks his missing charge. Doyle also navigates the social echelons of 19th-century England-from street urchins to palace guards to princes. In some exchanges, the vocal residue of one character bleeds into the voice of another. But that is a minor quibble. Doyle juggles an eclectic and other-worldly ensemble, never letting anything hit the ground. Ages 9-up. (Oct.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

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    Biography

    Frank Beddor is a film producer, screenwriter, ski champ, online gamer, and novelist. He lives in Los Angeles, California.

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    Customer Reviews

    Excellent retellingby Miffyminty

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    October 20, 2009: I have always liked retellings of old stories and fairy tales, and this series is by far one of the best I've read so far. Not only is the story compelling and exciting, it is very believable. Having part of the story take place in our world, the world where the original Alice in Wonderland was written, makes one wonder, maybe there is another dimension on the other side of the mirror.

    Alyss is a character that you want to win, and the obstacles she faces are both fantastical and very real. At first she lives in luxury at the Heart Palace in Wonderland, but she is forced into our world by violence and lies. Her troubles here are very real problems that people face every day, and just when it seems she has her life under control, she is thrown into another role by no choice of her own.

    In her battles with the forces of her aunt Redd, and then with Redd herself, Alyss learns things about herself and others that she would never have even imagined in her life in London.

    Frank Beddor's imaginative storytelling pulls you into each character's life and makes you feel almost as if you know them personally. You can tell what kind of moves they will make, or how they will react to situations, based on their personality, but even then, they may surprise you.

    Overall, these are wonderful books. I enjoyed them very much, and even read the first two in one day. Though they are classified as "teen fiction" these books would be enjoyed by fantasy readers of all ages, within reason of course.

    A great re-imagining of the world of Alice and Wonderland!by forever_dreamer

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    August 23, 2009: I've been hearing about this book for about two years now but only recently bought it. I really wanted to read it but I tried not to have high expectations seeing as I'd previously read a book that was also a re-imagining, this time of a fairy tale princess and was a bit disappointed.

    I have to say this time that I wasn't very disappointed by this book though I agree with some reviews regarding the characters as two-dimensional. The queen was evil but Frank does not go into specifics on why she was disowned by her parents and I've would've liked to have more insight into that.

    I also don't remember Alyss having any conflicts with her parents (mostly her mother, Queen Genevieve in the beginning of the book) at all. Children will not be 100% perfect at all times! Hatter's seemingly cold nature bothered me a bit but the reason why he is that way is given towards the end of the book so I will give him a pass for acting the way he was.

    Again a bit fast paced for me but definitely for those who would like to read a fresh re-imagining into Alice and Wonderland (if you don't like books with violence don't read this remember it's called the Looking Glass WARS. Let me note as well that this book is not for children though it may seem so at times.)


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