Everyone upstairs said it wrong
It is "Alice Through the Looking Glass", not Adventures in Wonderland, they are two different books
Lewis ·Lewis Carroll (1832-1898), whose real name was Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, was a mathematician who had long been a mathematics lecturer at Christ Church College at the prestigious Oxford University. Published several mathematical works. He has a severe stutter, so he is not good at interacting with others, but he has a wide range of interests and is quite accomplished in novels, poetry, and logic. He is also an excellent children's portrait photographer. "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland" was a story he told to his friend Robinson's daughter Alice. He wrote it down and gave it to her with his own illustrations (this handwritten book was photocopied and published in the UK in recent years) . Later, with the encouragement of friends, Carroll revised, expanded, and polished the manuscript, and it was officially published in 1865. Carroll later wrote a companion piece called "Through the Looking-Glass, and what Alice found there", which became popular around the world together with "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland". In addition, Carroll has also written poems such as "The Hunting of the Snark" and "Jabberwocky" that people like.