The narrative hook is the incongruity which runs throughout.
As humans we seek certainty, answers and explanations. We base our reasoning on logic, a logic derived from our own experiences and on our capacity to deduce inferences from the patterns we observe. Carroll flaunts this aspect of human nature; consequently the result is extremely evocative of dreams we may have all experienced.
In this way Carroll has made his amusing and intriguing story very true to life, the life we all might live in our dreams and nightmares!
The point of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland is to entertain, pure and simple.
The story was conceived for the amusement of some little girls Lewis Carroll knew one sunny afternoon, and subsequently written down because one of the girls asked him to.
In fact, much of the book is an argument against the idea that Children's Books should have a point, and that there should be room in children's literature for books which exist just for pleasure and entertainment.
(So it could be argued that the point of the book is to demonstrate that books don't have to have a point.)
"Alice in Wonderland" is written in the third-person point of view. The narrator describes events and characters from an external perspective rather than through the eyes of a specific character.
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland is told from a third person limited perspective.
Alice in Wonderland is written in the third person
It's written in first person point of view.
The book "Holes" is written in third-person point of view.
The sign is written from the point of view of a Northerner.
Memoirs are written in 1st person point of view, that was a very good question you asked there.
"The Stolen Day" is written in the third-person point of view.
Nothing is written in Edwards point of view. Though there is breaking dawn where there is jacob's point of view. There is also some of jacob's point of view at the end of eclipse.
The book is written from Bella's point of view.
"Dancing Bear" is written from the omniscient point of view.
"Godfather Death" is written in third-person point of view.
It is written in first person, Bella Swan's point of view, for the first third. Then for the second third, it is written in first person, Jacob Black's point of view. Finally, the last third is written in first person, Bella Swan's point of view.
perspective from which it is written.
Sherri Szeman has written: 'Mastering point of view' -- subject(s): Fiction, Point of view (Literature), Technique