BOOKS ABOUT LEWIS CARROLL

The Life and Letters of Lewis Carroll. By S. Dodgson Collingwood, 1898.
The Story of Lewis Carroll. By Isa Bowman. 1899.
Lewis Carroll in Wonderland and at Home. By Belle Moses. 1910.
A Bibliography of the Writings of Lewis Carroll. By S.H. Williams. 1924.
A Handbook of the Literature of the Rev. C.L. Dodgson. By S.H. Williams and Falconer Madan. 1931. Supplement, 1935.
The Life of Lewis Carroll. By Langford Reed. 1932.
The Lewis Carroll Centenary in London. By Falconer Madan. 1932.
Carroll's Alice. By Harry Morgan Ayres. 1936.
Victoria through the Looking-Glass. By Florence Becker Lennon. 1945. Revised as The Life of Lewis Carroll, 1962.
The Story of Lewis Carroll. By Roger Lancelyn Green. 1949.
Lewis Carroll -- Photographer. By Helmut Gernsheim. 1949.
The White Knight: A Study of C.L. Dodgson. By Alexander L. Taylor. 1952.
The Diaries of Lewis Carroll: Now first Edited and Supplemented by Roger Lancelyn Green. 1953.
Lewis Carroll. By Derek Hudson. 1954.
Swift and Carroll. By Phyllis Greenacre. 1955.
Lewis Carroll: A Bodley Head Monograph. By Roger Lancelyn Green. 1960.
The Annotated Alice. By Martin Gardner. 1960.

The Lewis Carroll Handbook. The Handbook by Williams and Madan revised with numerous additions, and brought up to 1960. By Roger Lancelyn Green. 1962.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

A Tour in 1867 from A Russian Journal edited by John Francis McDermott and published by E.P. Dutton & Co. Inc.

© John Francis McDermott 1935 -- by permission of the executors of the late Lewis Carroll and Messrs Dutton.

Crundle Castle from The Diaries of Lewis Carroll by permission of the executors of the late Lewis Carroll, Mr. Roger Lancelyn Green, Messrs Cassell & Co. Ltd and the Oxford University Press Inc.

The Walking Stick of Destiny from The Rectory Umbrella and Other Stories by permission of the executors of the late Lewis Carroll and Messrs Cassell & Co. Ltd.


1 I have not thought it necessary to reproduce here the glossary of words which may be used to form links. The preface will give a sufficiently clear idea of the classes of words which are not admissible.

1The best way is to imagine yourself walking round with the sun and asking the inhabitants as you go, `What morning is this?' If you suppose them living all the way around, and all speaking one language, the difficulty is obvious.

1This is clearly an impossible case, and is only put as an hypothesis.

2The usual exclamation at waking, generally said with a yawn.

3`If all the world were apple pie, And all the sea were ink, And all the trees were bread and cheese, What should we have to drink?'


  By PanEris using Melati.

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