Lewis Carroll's mirror-world sequel to Alice in Wonderland, brought to life with vintage illustrations and AI narration.
Six months after her adventure down the rabbit hole, Alice climbs onto the mantelpiece and steps through a mirror into a world where everything is reversed. Chess pieces walk and talk, flowers hold conversations, and the landscape is a giant chess-board on which Alice is a pawn bound for the eighth square -- and a crown.
Along the way she meets Tweedledum and Tweedledee, Humpty Dumpty, the White Knight, and hears the famous nonsense poem "The Jabberwocky." Carroll's 1871 sequel is every bit as playful and surreal as the original, with a tighter structure and some of his most quoted verse.
Stream free on YouTube, or order a personalized version narrated in your own voice for your child.
It helps but it's not required. Through the Looking-Glass is a standalone adventure -- Alice simply steps through a mirror instead of falling down a rabbit hole. That said, it's much richer if you've met the original Alice first. Listen to Alice in Wonderland here.
Yes. "The Jabberwocky" appears in Chapter 1 (Looking-Glass House), and Humpty Dumpty famously explains the nonsense words in Chapter 6. Every chapter of Carroll's 1871 novel is included, unabridged.
Absolutely. Record a short voice sample and our AI voice cloning technology will narrate Through the Looking-Glass in your voice. Learn more about personalized audiobooks.
About Classic Kid Lit · every story free on YouTube and as a podcast.