power:50 | 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:50(slider)
Prompt
/mtp power:50 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’s Adventures in Wonderland is a story about what happens when curiosity outruns common sense, and the result is one of the strangest, sharpest, funniest books ever written.**
Alice is sitting beside her sister, bored by an ordinary afternoon, when she sees a White Rabbit rush past muttering about being late. That is all it takes. She follows him down a rabbit hole and falls into a world where size, language, manners, logic, and identity refuse to stay put.
She drinks from mysterious bottles and grows too tall. She eats cake and shrinks too small. She swims through a pool of her own tears. She meets a mouse who lectures her, a caterpillar who asks the impossible question “Who are you?”, a Duchess with a violent kitchen, a Cheshire Cat who can vanish until only his grin remains, and a Mad Hatter trapped forever at tea-time.
The delight of the book is that Wonderland is not random nonsense. It has its own terrible rules. Everyone argues as if they are being reasonable, but nothing quite connects. A riddle has no answer. A game has no fair turns. A trial has no justice. The Queen of Hearts keeps shouting for executions, but the world is so absurd that even tyranny becomes ridiculous.
At the center of it all is Alice: polite, stubborn, frightened, brave, and increasingly unwilling to accept nonsense just because adults, animals, or royalty say it loudly. She keeps asking questions. She keeps noticing when things make no sense. By the end, that is her power.
Read it because it is short, fast, and packed with scenes people have been quoting for more than 150 years. But more than that, read it because it captures something childhood knows perfectly: the world is often governed by rules no one can explain, and sometimes the sanest thing you can do is question the whole performance.