The Looking Glass House has a very unique selling point to recommend it. The author, Vanessa Tait, is the great-granddaughter of Alice Liddell, the inspiration for Alice in Wonderland, and she presents us with the story of Lewis Carroll’s friendship and then desertion by the Liddell family, but from the viewpoint of the governess, Mary Prickett.
Mary Prickett (unknown photographer)
If you have been following the fashions in Carroll-interpretation then you will be familiar with the notion that instead of desiring the formidable girl-queen Alice, it was actually the ever-present Miss Prickett that Carroll was paying court to, but with most things to do with the ever elusive Reverend Charles Dodgson, nothing is clear-cut.In Tait’s story, she presents us with a governess, surely one of the loneliest jobs in Victorian England, in a city full of riches, all of which are denied her.Into her life comes the gentle, unusual bachelor, Dodgson, who deplores the rough physicalities of life, who captures the pure wonder of beauty and who also captures Miss Prickett’s eye.What could possibly go wrong?The Liddell sisters, Edith, Ina and Alice (1858) Lewis Carroll
The book itself is beautifully presented.I am a sucker for book design and the positive/negative silhouettes and references to Wonderland on the cover are nicely judged. The characters of Wonderland are sneaked in to the cover and the text both obviously and surreptitiously, such as with touches like the ‘Fat-Ten-U’ medicine that Mary considers to plump her figure.Alice as the Beggar Maid awaiting her King Cophetua (1858) Lewis Carroll
The character of Alice is probably one thing that will draw readers to the book.What exactly was going on there?And will we ever know? The problem I have with the whole Dodgson and Alice affair is that is almost impossible to look at it in an unbiased manner now as so much information and presumption has happened in the last 150 years.I suspect the advent of the internet, not to mention photoshop has not helped matters one little bit, causing things like this to happen…Take this photograph of Lewis Carroll...
Add this photograph, presumably a father and daughter
And together with the 'Alice' from the Sisters picture above,
Hey presto, call Project Yew Tree....
Grace Weld as Red Riding Hood (1857) Lewis Carroll
The image is referenced in the novel
The Look Glass House is available to buy now from Amazon UK (here), to preorder USA (here) or at a bookshop near you...