8,49 €
Klassiker in Englisch Niveau A1. Die Bücher dieser Reihe eignen sich für Jugendliche und Erwachsene, die mit klassischen Werken ihre Lesefähigkeit verbessern wollen. Englisch Niveau A1, durchgehend in englischer Sprache. "Alice im Wunderland" ist ein klassischer Roman von Lewis Carroll, erstmals veröffentlicht im Jahr 1865. Diese phantastische Erzählung erzählt die Abenteuer des jungen Mädchens Alice, das einem weißen Kaninchen in ein magisches Untergrundreich folgt. In dieser wundersamen Welt trifft Alice auf eine Vielzahl von unvergesslichen Figuren wie die Grinsekatze, die verrückte Hutmacher, die Märzhase und die tyrannische Herzkönigin. Jede Begegnung stellt Alice vor neue Herausforderungen und Rätsel, die sie mit Witz und oft mit einer Prise gesundem Menschenverstand löst. Eines der markantesten Merkmale des Buches ist seine spielerische Manipulation der Logik, was es zu einem der ersten Beispiele in der literarischen Nonsens-Tradition macht. Die Welt, in die Alice stolpert, ist bizarr und die Regeln der Realität gelten hier nicht. Stattdessen wird Alice mit absurden Gedichten, paradoxen Rätseln und merkwürdigen Gesetzen konfrontiert, die sie und den Leser gleichermaßen amüsieren und verwirren. Das Buch bleibt ein zeitloser Klassiker, der für seine kreativen Wortspiele, seine humorvolle Erzählung und seine Fähigkeit, die Realität auf den Kopf zu stellen, geliebt wird.
Das E-Book können Sie in Legimi-Apps oder einer beliebigen App lesen, die das folgende Format unterstützen:
Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2025
Alice is bored. She is sitting with her sister by the river. She doesn't like her sister's book. It has no pictures. Alice thinks, “Books without pictures are useless.”
She wonders, “Should I pick some flowers?”
Then she sees a rabbit. It is white and has red eyes. Alice doesn't find that funny. The rabbit says, “Oh dear! I'm late!” Alice isn't surprised.
Then the rabbit pulls a watch out of its pocket.
Now Alice is curious. She has never seen a rabbit with a watch before. Alice jumps up. She runs after the rabbit. The rabbit runs into a hole. Alice doesn't think twice. She jumps in after it.
The passage goes straight ahead at first. Then Alice suddenly falls down. The shaft is deep. Alice falls slowly. She can look around. The walls have books and cupboards. Pictures hang on hooks. Alice grabs a jar. The jar says, “Preserved oranges.” It is empty.
Alice thinks, “I mustn't drop it.”
She puts it back carefully. Alice continues to fall.
She wonders, “How deep am I falling? Maybe I'll reach the center of the earth.”
Alice continues talking. She says, “Maybe I'll fall through the earth. Maybe I'll end up in Australia.”
She thinks about it. “People walk on their heads there. I'll ask them why.” Then she laughs. “Better not. They'll think I'm stupid.” Alice continues to fall. She thinks of her cat.
She says, “Dinah will miss me.”
Alice is getting tired. She says quietly, “Do cats eat sparrows? Do sparrows eat cats?” No one answers.
Alice almost falls asleep. Then she lands on a pile of leaves. The fall is over.
Alice jumps up. She sees a corridor. The rabbit continues running. It says, “Oh, how late it is!”
Alice runs after it. Then the rabbit turns a corner. Alice can no longer see it. She is standing in a long hallway. Lamps hang from the ceiling. There are many doors on the walls. Alice wants to open a door. All the doors are locked.
Alice continues on. Then she sees a small glass table. On it lies a golden key. Alice takes the key. She tries it on the doors. But the key doesn't fit.
Then she sees a curtain. Behind it is a tiny door. Alice puts the key in the lock. It fits. Alice opens the door.
Behind it she sees a garden. The garden is beautiful. Alice wants to go in. But the door is too small.
Alice sticks her head through. She says, “That doesn't help me.”
She goes back to the table. Maybe she'll find something new. Now she sees a small bottle. There's a note attached to it. It says, “Drink me!”
Alice is careful. She says, “I have to check it first. Maybe it's poisonous.” She looks closely. There is no skull on the bottle.
Alice takes a sip. It tastes good. She drinks it all.
Then she says, “What a strange feeling! I'm getting smaller.”
Alice is happy. Now she can go through the door. She waits a moment. She says, “Maybe I'll shrink even more.”
She is a little scared. She thinks, “Maybe I'll disappear completely.”
But nothing happens. Alice wants to leave. Then she notices something. The key is still on the table. Now the table is too high. Alice can't reach the key. She can see it through the glass. But she can't get to it. She tries to climb up. It doesn't work.
Alice sits down. She starts to cry. Then she says to herself, “Be quiet now! Crying won't help.”
She often gives herself good advice. But she doesn't listen to it.
Then she sees something. Under the table is a small glass jar. Alice opens it. Inside is a cake. On the cake is written, “Eat me!”
Alice says, “Okay, I'll eat it. Maybe then I'll get bigger. Then I can get the key. Or maybe I'll get smaller. Then I can crawl under the door. That way I can get into the garden.”
Alice takes a piece of the cake. Then she asks herself, “Will I grow or shrink?” She puts her hand on her head. She wants to check. But nothing happens.
Alice is surprised.
She says, “That's strange! Why isn't anything happening?” She thinks about it. Then she eats the whole cake.
Alice cries, “Stranger and stranger! Now I'm getting longer and longer! Goodbye, feet!”
She looks down. Her feet are far away. She says, "Oh, my poor feet! Who's going to put your shoes on now?
I'm too far away! You'll have to manage on your own.”
Then she thinks about it. She says, “I will give you new boots for Christmas. But how am I going to do that?”
She thinks for a moment. Then she says, “I will send them by mail. How funny! A present to my own feet!"
Then she calls out, “Oh, what nonsense I am talking!”
At that moment, her head hits the ceiling. She quickly grabs the little key. Then she goes to the garden door.
But Alice is much too tall. She can only see through with one eye.
Alice sits down. Then she starts to cry. She says to herself, “You should be ashamed of yourself! A big girl like you shouldn't cry! Stop it right now!”
But she continues to cry. The floor is wet. A large puddle forms around her.
Suddenly, she hears footsteps. She quickly dries her tears.
Who is coming? It is the White Rabbit. He is wearing white gloves. In one hand, he is holding a fan. He mutters, “Oh! The Duchess! She will be very angry! I must not keep her waiting!”
Alice plucks up her courage. She says cautiously, “Please, dear sir...” The rabbit is startled. It drops its gloves and fan. Then it runs away.
Alice picks up the items. She says quietly to herself, “How strange everything is today! Everything was normal yesterday. Maybe I've changed? But who am I now? That's the big mystery!”
Alice thinks of the other children. She asks herself, “Am I Ida? No, Ida has long curly hair. My hair is straight. Then maybe I'm Clara? No, Clara doesn't know much. I know a lot. Besides, Clara is herself. And I am me.”
Alice is confused. She says, "I want to test it. Am I still smart? Let's see... 4 times 5 is 12. 4 times 6 is 13. 4 times 7 is... oh dear! I'll never get to 20! Math is hard. I'll try geography. London is the capital of Paris. Paris is the capital of Rome. Rome is... no, that's wrong! I'm Clara! Maybe I can still remember my school poem?" Alice recites the poem:
“At a tavern, wonderfully wild.
There I am a guest.
A bee's nest is his sign.
In a brown paw.”
Then she cries out, “That doesn't sound right! Oh no! I'm really Clara! Now I have to live in that little house. I'll have almost no toys!”
Alice starts to cry. Then she says, sobbing, “Why isn't anyone coming to me? It's so boring all alone!” Alice looks at her hands. She notices something. She is wearing one of the white gloves. She wonders, “How did that happen?”
Then she realizes: she has shrunk again.
She stands up. She goes to the table. She continues to shrink. Then she looks at the fan. She says in alarm, “The fan is to blame!”
Alice quickly throws it away. Then she stops shrinking.
She says with relief, “That was close! Now I'm going to the garden!” She runs to the little door. But the door is closed!
Alice cries, “Oh no!”