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P:16 | 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: P:16 (grid)

Prompt

/mtp P:16 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.

Alice is bored on a riverbank when she sees a White Rabbit in a waistcoat muttering about being late. Sensible children do not follow rabbits into holes. Alice does.
Down she falls into a world where size is negotiable, logic has slipped its leash, and every rule seems to have been invented five seconds ago by someone unreasonable. She drinks from bottles, eats mysterious cakes, grows too tall, shrinks too small, swims through her own tears, and keeps trying to be polite to creatures who make politeness almost impossible.
Wonderland is not a fairyland of gentle lessons. It is sharper, stranger, and funnier than that. A Caterpillar asks who she is, as if the question should be easy. A Duchess turns cruelty into nonsense. A Cheshire Cat grins until only the grin remains. A Mad Hatter hosts a tea party where time itself has stopped cooperating. The Queen of Hearts wants everyone’s head off before anyone has properly explained the crime.
What makes the book so alive is Alice herself. She is confused, stubborn, curious, offended, brave, and constantly trying to reason with a world that refuses to be reasonable. The joke is not just that Wonderland is absurd. The joke is that childhood, adulthood, schoolroom rules, manners, poems, trials, and authority often sound just as absurd when you hear them clearly.
**Conclusion**
Read *Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland* because it is not merely a children’s fantasy. It is a dream with teeth, a comedy of logic gone wild, and one of the rare books where every page feels as if a trapdoor might open under your feet. Follow the White Rabbit: the fall is the point.