

📚 Unlock the magic of words with Carroll’s timeless poetry—don’t miss out on literary legend!
Digireads.com Jabberwocky and Other Poems is a 58-page paperback collection featuring the whimsical and iconic poetry of Lewis Carroll. Perfectly suited for poetry enthusiasts and literary explorers, this edition offers a compact, accessible way to experience Carroll’s playful language and imaginative worlds. Highly rated by readers, it combines classic charm with modern convenience, including fast shipping and easy returns.
| Best Sellers Rank | #236,221 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #528 in European Poetry #20,955 in Higher & Continuing Education Textbooks #25,601 in Teen & Young Adult |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 201 Reviews |
T**B
Nonsensical, sensical, entertaining
Just wanted to read some poems of an author I liked that were fun, maybe even nonsensical. So I ordered this edition and started reading the poems. It has been a while since I read poems, so this is just reading them and enjoying them, looking at what is there. Learning more, by reading other poems of the 19th century understanding will grow, and when I return at another time, who knows, what I will read and understand then? There is only a little introduction to the author and his poems, tracing his biography in a few lines and his major works as in Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass.
S**I
le livre est en bon etat
le livre est en tres bon etat, il n'y a pas de defaut apparent sur la couverture ou à l'interieur
W**E
Très succinct
Je me suis sans doute trompée : ce minuscule livret n’a AUCUNE illustration . Autant pour moi .
T**.
Great Little Book
Great book for kids Adults will enjoy it too
B**H
I love this little book
I love the poems especially the Jabberwocky which is why I bought it. However during the shipping process (I think it was just too small compared to all my other books in the package) it was bent by one of the cardboard flaps and I had to do some re-enforcing with book tape to try to keep the book in at least good condition. I am curious though, if the poem was about a boy who had to slay the Jabberwocky, Why is there a girl, presumably, Alice that slays it? Is it just the time period where girls and women were second class and couldn't fathom being a heroine?
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