D:4 | Gemini 3.5 Flash | Literary task
Metadata
- Date: 2026-05-22
- Tool: Google Antigravity 2.0 (macOS app)
- Model: Gemini 3.5 Flash
- MTP Skill version: 1.0.0
- MTP Skill arguments:
D:4(grid)
Prompt
/mtp D:4 Tell the story of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll in a way that makes someone want to read it.(No artifacts, no image generation.)Output
Section titled “Output”The text below is copied from the tool output using the “Copy” button.
What if the true allure of *Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland* isn't the destination, but the complete unraveling of the rules we take for granted?
Rather than a simple journey from point A to point B, we might ask: what happens to our sense of self when the physical laws of the world around us begin to shift and stretch?
When Alice follows a waistcoat-wearing White Rabbit down a dark hole, she doesn't just enter a different land—she enters a space where language, identity, and logic are constantly reframed. One could read it as:- **An exploration of unstable identity:** Alice constantly changes size, leading to the famous encounter with the Caterpillar who asks her, "Who are *you*?" She finds she cannot answer definitively, as she has changed so many times in a single day.- **A playground of mathematical logic:** Lewis Carroll, a mathematician by trade, fills the narrative with puzzles that seem absurd but operate on strict logical principles. The Mad Hatter's tea party, for instance, might represent a satire of contemporary abstract mathematics, or perhaps a meditation on the nature of time.- **A subversion of authority:** The arbitrary, threat-laden rules of the Queen of Hearts ("Off with their heads!") can be seen as a parody of Victorian adult authority, viewed through the bewildered yet sensible eyes of a child.
Instead of looking for a traditional plot, one might wonder: is Wonderland a celebration of pure intellectual freedom, or is it a subtly unsettling mirror of our own chaotic world?
If you are curious to explore this world, there are several pathways to choose from:- **The Original Text:** Lewis Carroll's prose, filled with puns, poems, and linguistic tricks that reward careful reading.- **John Tenniel's Illustrations:** The classic woodblock prints that shaped the visual identity of Wonderland.- **The Annotated Alice (by Martin Gardner):** A version that unpacks the hidden mathematical jokes, Victorian references, and personal riddles embedded in the text.- **The Psychological Reading:** Exploring the text as a dream narrative, where every character represents a fragment of Alice's own subconscious mind.
Which of these entry points into Wonderland speaks most to your curiosity?