J:10 | ChatGPT 5.5 | Literary task
Metadata
- Date: 2026-05-23
- Tool: Codex (macOS app)
- Model: ChatGPT 5.5 (Medium)
- MTP Skill version: 1.0.0
- MTP Skill arguments:
J:10(grid)
Prompt
/mtp J:10 Tell the story of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll in a way that makes someone want to read it.Output
Section titled “Output”The text below is copied from the tool output using the “Copy” button.
Alice is bored beside a riverbank when she sees the impossible behave as if it has an appointment: a White Rabbit, dressed and anxious, checks his watch and hurries away.
That is all it takes.
She follows him down the rabbit-hole and falls, slowly and strangely, past cupboards and maps and jars of marmalade, into a world where size is negotiable, logic has gone feral, and every conversation feels like a trapdoor. She drinks from bottles, eats from cakes, grows too tall, shrinks too small, swims through her own tears, and meets creatures who treat nonsense with the seriousness of law.
A Caterpillar smokes and asks who she is. A Duchess nurses a baby that may not remain a baby. A Cheshire Cat smiles after the rest of him has vanished, which is somehow both funny and sinister. At a tea party that never ends, the Mad Hatter, the March Hare, and the Dormouse have murdered time and now live forever at six o’clock, passing riddles around like broken china.
And then there is the Queen of Hearts, whose answer to almost everything is execution.
What makes *Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland* so irresistible is not just that it is strange. It is that its strangeness feels awake. Every page turns childhood questions into theater: Why do adults make rules they cannot explain? Why does language slip when you hold it too tightly? Why is identity so fragile when someone simply asks, “Who are you?”
Alice is not a warrior, a chosen one, or a saintly child. She is curious, irritated, polite until politeness becomes impossible, and brave in the exact way children often are: by continuing to ask obvious questions in a world that has decided obvious questions are rude.
The book is funny, quick, dreamlike, and sharper than it first appears. It reads like a game, but one where the board keeps changing shape. Follow the Rabbit, and you don’t just enter Wonderland. You enter the part of imagination that refuses to behave.