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The original book, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, has one queen, the Queen of Hearts.The sequel to that book, Through the Looking Glass, begins with two queens, the Red Queen and the White Queen, but at the end of the book, Alice also becomes a queen.
she had stained glass windows
The White Queen appears in "Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There," which is the sequel to "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland."
Through the looking glass or Alice in wonderland
The Further Adventures of Ellery Queen - 1958 The Glass Village 1-1 was released on: USA: 26 September 1958
In Alice in Wonderland, Alice plays a game of croquet against the Queen of Hearts.In the second book, Through the Looking Glass, she plays against the Red Queen in a game of chess.The Red Queen and the Queen of Hearts are two different people.
The Red Queen tells Alice she can be a white pawn because the White King and Queen's daughter, Lily is too young to play.You can be the White Queen's Pawn, if you like, as Lily's too young to play
In the original book the queen is called the Queen of Hearts.In movie adaptions her character is sometimes merged with the Red Queen, who originally appeared in Through the Looking Glass and was a completely separate person.Tim Burton's 2010 movie features the Red Queen and the White Queen. They have named the Red Queen, Iracebeth of Crims and the White Queen, Mirana of Marmoreal.
Through the Looking Glass is the sequel to Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. It is based on a giant chess game in which Alice begins as a pawn, but eventually becomes a queen.
The first book, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, features just one queen, the Queen of Hearts (just like the playing card). The second book, Through the Looking-Glass, starts out with two - the Red Queen and the White Queen (just like the chess pieces) - but by the end of the book, Alice herself becomes a queen because she has reached the top of the board. (In chess, if a pawn reaches the top of the board it is made a queen)
The Red Queen is a character in a book by Lewis Carroll. It's a fantasy story called "Through the Looking-Glass." Lewis Carroll is a pen name for Charles Lutwidge Dodgson.
In Through the Looking-Glass, the White Queen says that sometimes she's "believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast."