concierge | 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:
concierge(preset)
Prompt
/mtp concierge 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.
**Down the Rabbit Hole**
Alice is bored on a hot, ordinary afternoon when a White Rabbit hurries past, wearing a waistcoat and muttering that he is late. That is strange enough. Stranger still, he has a pocket watch. Alice follows him, tumbles down a rabbit hole, and falls not into danger exactly, but into a world where danger has learned to speak in riddles.
Wonderland does not behave. A bottle says “Drink me,” a cake says “Eat me,” and Alice grows and shrinks until even her own body feels like a puzzle. She weeps a pool of tears, argues with a mouse, attends a caucus-race where everyone runs in circles, and learns quickly that this place has rules, but not the kind that help.
Then the story becomes a parade of unforgettable encounters. The Caterpillar asks, “Who are you?” as if Alice ought to know. The Duchess’s kitchen is full of pepper, fury, and a baby that turns into a pig. The Cheshire Cat smiles as though he understands everything and refuses to explain enough of it. At the Mad Tea-Party, the Hatter, March Hare, and Dormouse trap Alice in a conversation where time itself seems broken.
And still, Alice keeps going.
At last she reaches the Queen of Hearts, who plays croquet with flamingos for mallets and hedgehogs for balls, and who solves every inconvenience by shouting for someone’s head. The trial near the end is nonsense dressed up as justice: witnesses ramble, evidence means nothing, and everyone acts as though absurdity becomes law if spoken loudly enough.
What makes the book magical is not just that Wonderland is bizarre. It is that Alice remains stubbornly herself inside it. She is curious, irritated, brave, polite until politeness becomes impossible, and always trying to make sense of a world that keeps slipping out of sense. Reading it feels like remembering the wild logic of dreams: funny, unsettling, beautiful, and somehow true.
By the end, you do not simply want to know what happens to Alice. You want to fall after her, sit at the tea table, question the Cat, annoy the Queen, and see whether your own common sense survives Wonderland.