power:100 | 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:
power:100(slider)
Prompt
/mtp power:100 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.
**Read Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland because it is not a children’s book pretending to be simple. It is a trapdoor under ordinary life.**
Alice follows a white rabbit because he is late. That is all it takes. One impossible detail in a dull afternoon, one waistcoat, one watch, one rabbit muttering about time, and the world opens beneath her feet.
Down she falls.
At the bottom is Wonderland: a place where logic has teeth, language misbehaves, and every conversation turns into a game you are already losing. Alice shrinks, grows, swims through her own tears, argues with animals, takes advice from a smoking caterpillar, attends the worst tea party in literature, meets a cat that can leave its grin behind, and stands trial in a court where nonsense has the force of law.
The joy of the book is not that “anything can happen.” That is too weak. The joy is that everything happens according to a strange, razor-sharp anti-logic. Wonderland is absurd, but never random. Every pun becomes a door. Every rule becomes a weapon. Every adult-sounding authority figure turns out to be ridiculous.
And Alice is the reason it works. She is curious, stubborn, polite until politeness becomes impossible, and increasingly unwilling to be bullied by nonsense. She does not conquer Wonderland with a sword. She conquers it by noticing when things make no sense and finally saying so.
That is the thrill: the book starts as a dream and becomes a rebellion.
Read it for the Queen shouting “Off with their heads!” Read it for the Mad Tea-Party. Read it for the Cheshire Cat. But mostly read it because Carroll captures something permanent: childhood is not innocence. Childhood is being dropped into a world full of arbitrary rules and being brave enough to ask, “Who made these rules, and why should I obey them?”