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J:4 | 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:4 (grid)

Prompt

/mtp J:4 Tell the story of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll in a way that makes someone want to read it.

The text below is copied from the tool output using the “Copy” button.

**Read Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland because it is not a children’s story you outgrow. It is a dream that keeps getting sharper.**
Alice follows a white rabbit because he is late. That is all it takes. One strange decision, one impossible doorway, and the ordinary world falls away.
She drinks from a bottle and shrinks. She eats from a cake and grows. She swims through her own tears. She meets a caterpillar who asks the hardest question in the book: “Who are you?” No one gives straight answers. Everyone argues. Logic bends, manners turn dangerous, and every rule seems invented by someone who forgot why rules exist.
The magic of Wonderland is not that it is random. It is that it feels like childhood from the inside: adults speaking nonsense with authority, games whose rules change halfway through, punishments announced before crimes, poems that sound familiar but go wrong in your hands.
Then comes the Queen of Hearts, shouting for heads to roll. Then the trial, where evidence means nothing and words mean whatever the powerful say they mean. Alice has been small, large, confused, corrected, mocked, and ordered around. But by the end, she grows into the one thing Wonderland cannot control: someone willing to say, plainly, “You’re nothing but a pack of cards.”
That is why the book lasts. It is funny, yes. It is strange, yes. But underneath the tea parties and talking animals is a fierce little story about keeping your mind when the world insists on nonsense.
Read it for the rabbit. Stay for the madness. Remember it for Alice.