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A mind-bending new novel inspired by the twisted and wondrous works of Lewis Carroll...

In a warren of crumbling buildings and desperate people called the Old City, there stands a hospital with cinderblock walls which echo the screams of the poor souls inside.

In the hospital, there is a woman. Her hair, once blond, hangs in tangles down her back. She doesn’t remember why she’s in such a terrible place. Just a tea party long ago, and long ears, and blood…

Then, one night, a fire at the hospital gives the woman a chance to escape, tumbling out of the hole that imprisoned her, leaving her free to uncover the truth about what happened to her all those years ago.

Only something else has escaped with her. Something dark. Something powerful.

And to find the truth, she will have to track this beast to the very heart of the Old City, where the rabbit waits for his Alice.

291 pages, Paperback

First published August 4, 2015

2547 people are currently reading
109577 people want to read

About the author

Christina Henry

57 books8,292 followers
Christina Henry is a horror and dark fantasy author whose works include GOOD GIRLS DON'T DIE, HORSEMAN, NEAR THE BONE, THE GHOST TREE, LOOKING GLASS, THE GIRL IN RED, THE MERMAID, LOST BOY, RED QUEEN, ALICE, and the seven book urban fantasy BLACK WINGS series.

Her short stories have been featured in the anthologies ELEMENTAL FORCES, CURSED, TWICE CURSED, GIVING THE DEVIL HIS DUE and KICKING IT.

She enjoys running long distances, reading anything she can get her hands on and watching movies with samurai, zombies and/or subtitles in her spare time. She lives in Chicago with her husband and son.

You can visit her on the web at
www.christinahenry.net
Facebook: authorChristinaHenry
Threads: authorChristinaHenry
Instagram: authorChristinaHenry
Goodreads: goodreads.com/CHenryAuthor

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 7,477 reviews
Profile Image for Emily May.
2,198 reviews319k followers
August 14, 2015
“Alice dreamed of blood. Blood on her hands and under her feet, blood in her mouth and pouring from her eyes. The room was filled with it.”

This is one of the best, darkest and most disturbing retellings I have ever read. The author gets extremely creative with this world, weaving in characters we recognize from the original Alice in Wonderland but telling a very different kind of story. If you like your retellings to stay close to the original, then don't waste your time with Alice - it is very different.

The world created here is not our world and it is not Wonderland. It's a horor-fantasy style setting in a fictional place called the Old City. Ever since Alice returned to her parents after going missing as a child, with blood running down her legs, missing memories, and strange inexplicable abilities, she has been deemed mad.

Years later, she's in a hospital. Her only friend is Hatcher - the man who talks to her from the next cell and also remembers very little of his life before. And then one night a fire at the hospital sets them both free, but their suffering is far from over.

After escaping, they see a shadow of a monster watching them and somehow Hatcher knows what it means: the Jabberwock is free. And there is only one way to kill him. To find it, Alice and Hatcher are forced deep into the bowels of the Old City, a place run by overlords - the Walrus, the Carpenter, the Caterpillar and Cheshire. And somewhere in the darkness of this city fuelled by pain and misery, there lies the truth about Alice's forgotten past. The Rabbit waits for her.

These names may be familiar, but favourite characters become terrifyingly monstrous in the author's hands. I don't want to sugar coat it in the slightest - this book is an adult, gory and sometimes upsetting fairytale. If you are disturbed by Brom's The Child Thief or Margo Lanagan's Tender Morsels, then you will not like this book. Take this quote about a girl who has been "bought", tortured, and displayed for amusement:
“The wings were not attached to her shoulders by straps. The girl’s back had been cut from the top of her shoulder to the bottom of her rib cage on both sides of her spine. The beautiful butterfly wings were neatly sewn into the exposed muscle. As the girl flexed her shoulders, the wings would beat.”

That is the kind of book this is.

I also need to offer a huge trigger warning. Wendy already mentioned this, but there is a lot of rape in this book. At the end, I felt like I understood why the author chose to include it and why it had importance in the story, but that didn't make it any less disturbing to read.

But if you can stomach it, this is definitely worth the read. Very imaginative, magical, creepy and horrifying. A beautifully-written little nightmare.

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Profile Image for Nilufer Ozmekik.
3,040 reviews59.3k followers
June 25, 2025
Welcome to the grimy tales of Alice in Darkland. Team of Alice and Hatcher, or let’s call them ALCHER, are getting out of the asylum for avenging the people who put them there and leaving for nearly 10 freaking years!

Alice was raped by a rabbit, and she retaliated by taking his eye with the knife, as the rabbit put an ugly knife scar across her cheeks to mark her. She ran away in front of the horrified servants of the rabbit, but her own family disowned her, so the only person who helped her to survive throughout her asylum years was Hatcher, who also witnessed the massacre of his wife and kidnapping of his own daughter.

Team ALCHER reminds you of Natural Born Killers’ Mickey and Mallory or You’s Joe and Love, but their only resemblance is being bloodthirsty killers. They’re not sociopaths, stalkers, or obsessive psychopaths. Both of them keep their light and goodness inside, but the traumatic experiences and abandonment made them who they are right now!

This retelling is dirty, irritating, nerve-bending, graphic, and brutal. It’s even darker than the Grimm Brothers stories. There are massacres, rape, illegal girl trafficking, cannibalism, and violent murders. You feel like you just stepped into the dark side of the moon.

At some parts, I couldn’t decide if I should be afraid of the monsters of the books or the inner monsters of the normal people who took control of them for diving into more violent acts. When ALCHER leaves the asylum, they accidentally freed one of the most dangerous creatures: Jabberwocky out there. But at some parts, we see that Alice can control Jabberwock, so does it make her a more terrifying creature?

When Alice follows her bloody, gruesome, and vulgar path, she turns into Tarantino’s Bride from Kill Bill and starts her avenging game. Her partner in crime, Hatcher, accompanied her everywhere. They saved each other’s lives, and at the end, we understand their stories didn’t end so far.

This one is exciting, heart-throbbing, but also mind-numbing and definitely so much of a bloody journey that I can ever imagine. (Yes, this story should be adapted into a series, but only Tarantino’s direction can deal with so much blood, violence, and rottenness!)

I loved the first book, and I’m so ready to dive into the second one, even though there are mixed reviews and heavy criticism about the direction of the story. Let’s read and decide about it!
Profile Image for emma.
2,511 reviews88.8k followers
March 29, 2017
Review: 1.25/5


Well, as a retelling, that did a rather curious job.


I was so excited to read this book! It's even on my "can't wait to read" shelf. There is something about the idea of a retelling in which Alice has escaped from an asylum that so fits the wondrous aura of the original book. Yet this did not stick to any of the plot-points, truly. Which was very disappointing. I imagine it would be extremely difficult to manufacture a narrative from the nearly unrelated curiosities of the original Alice in Wonderland—Tim Burton certainly struggled—but it seemed like the only thing this attempt did was take some names.


It seems that this is not the only shared factor between Tim Burton’s adaptation and Christina Henry’s. Both focus upon the plotline of Alice defeating the Jabberwocky (which is somewhat ridiculous if you think about it). Both require a certain blade to kill it. Both have weird sexualizations of the plot points, which is so odd because the original Alice is a CHILD. (Especially Henry’s—the entirety of the book was centered upon human trafficking for prostitution and sexual assault.) Both have significantly aged Alices, perhaps to fit this. Maybe Henry was adapting Burton’s take on the book rather than the book itself. It all came off as very plagiarized.


Things, specifically, that bugged me about Henry’s take: Alice travels with her middle aged mental-institution-next-door-neighbor, whom she is in love with for some reason? He, to the best of my detection, is not modeled upon a character. The Rabbit is a villain, the main one, and does not share any attributes with the original White Rabbit. In fact, it seems that Henry may have intended the Rabbit to mean the March Hare? Everyone in the book is a villain and there is a strange incorporation of characters from Through the Looking Glass, but not the important ones (Tweedle Dee, Tweedle Dum and the chess pieces, for example, go undiscussed. Maybe in the next books). In general it was so frustrating to try to compare this book to the original, because it didn’t add up. And that is all the fun of retellings!


After 291 pages of unspeakable violence, the ending of this book was unbelievably anticlimactic. We follow Alice and Hatcher, her extremely old, my-only-character-trait-is-I’m-a-crazy-murderer love interest, as they battle their way to the two “boss” characters: the Rabbit and the Jabberwocky. I don’t want to spoil anything, so I’ll just say we encounter these guys for a total of the last dozen pages. Very frustrating.


God, I’m so upset by how much I hated this. What a cool concept, entirely dashed.


Bottom line: if you like very violent books, you may like this. If you like retellings, you will not. I sure didn’t.
Profile Image for Jessica ❁ ➳ Silverbow ➳ ❁ .
1,293 reviews8,993 followers
March 25, 2018
3/25/18 - ON SALE for $1.99:



https://amzn.to/2I1ZA6B

9/12/15: When I first read ALICE, I had a hard time categorizing it. It was Victorian, but it wasn't steampumk. It was horror . . . ish. Fortunately, it very obviously a retelling, so at least I had that. BUT. Just having read this article: http://www.dailydot.com/geek/dreadpun... I can now solidly identify it at DREADPUNK. *grins creepily*

Reviewed by: Rabid Reads

4.5 stars

The first thing you should know is that I bloody hate ALICE IN WONDERLAND.

In fact, with the exception of THE JABBERWOCKEY, which I appreciate for English nerd reasons (nonsense words that make sense b/c masterful command of grammar), I bloody hate Lewis Carroll.

Too weird. #sorrynotsorry

I've also read an installment or two of Henry's BLACK WINGS series, and I wasn't terribly impressed. My top two least favorite subjects in urban fantasy are: dead things and angels. BLACK WINGS is basically about angels dealing with dead things.

SO. A book from an author I've previously not had much luck with, on a subject I've loathed since childhood . . .

You're probably wondering why on earth I bothered with ALICE.

Honestly, so did I.

And if it hadn't immediately captured my attention, I doubt I'd've stuck with it.

But it did. And I did.

The second thing you should know is that this book isn't for the faint of heart.

This Alice is an adult who's spent the last ten years institutionalized after stumbling out of the Old City with blood on her thighs, raving about a rabbit.

YES. That means exactly what you think it means.

And what happened to Alice isn't uncommon in this world.

Usually this kind of thing has me running, screaming in the opposite direction, but ALICE is a perfect example of the difference between dark and crude.

Dark means real life Bad Things happen. It's awful, it's presented as awful, but you're mostly seeing the aftermath of the awful, not a play-by-play account in real time.

It's realistic, but not shockingly so.

Crude means your face is shoved in the awful b/c this-is-life-suck-it-up-and-deal-with-it-you-pansy-suburban-housewife. Crude means deliberately crass terminology used for the express purpose of making something already awful even more awful.

I have zero tolerance for crude.

Dark I can handle.

And if the perpetrators get what's coming to them, my bloodthirstiness comes out to play and rolls around in the darkness. Like some kind of fiery-eyed hellhound.

ALICE is darrrrrrrrrk.

But it's also a perfect blend of old school Carroll strangeness and modern urban fantasy (albeit in a more Victorian setting) that I could not put down. I read the whole thing on a Saturday afternoon.

I loved the characters, especially our two MCs Alice and Hatcher, who were each other's only solace for eight years in the hospital where they were held. Despite the shared experience and insanity, they are as different as two people can be, their disparate strengths and weaknesses making them that much stronger together.

The world was bleak, yet fascinating. Make no mistake, Bad Things happen here. BUT. There is also justice, and that makes all the difference.

ALICE by Christina Henry is hopefully the first of many installments in this new weirdly fantastic series--definitely my most surprising read of the year so far. Henry's Alice knows that sometimes you have to hurt people before they can hurt you, and she doesn't hesitate to do exactly that. And even if she did, her mad companion Hatcher, thusly named for the killing frenzy that resulted in at least six deaths-by-ax, would not. They're on a mission, and if they're coming for you . . . Run, Rabbit, run.

Jessica Signature

My other reviews for this series:

Red Queen (Alice #2)
Profile Image for Wendy Darling.
2,171 reviews34.2k followers
August 14, 2015
This is a bizarre, violent story, one full of menace and dark magic. It's trippy the way that every Alice book should be, and full of nightmarish images and themes.

I loved it for the most part...but. BUT. I have one problem with it, and it's a pretty major one: the book is extremely rape-y. Huge trigger warning if you are bothered by sexual violence of any sort, because it's everywhere in this world, both blatant and implied, and both active and imagined.

While I've always thought most fairy tale retellings and re-imaginings could use a bit more meditation on the themes of seduction and coercion--it's in the very nature of many of the original stories, after all--I was extremely bothered by the degree of rape and abuse here.

If you are able to look past that--ugh, it pains me to even phrase this in such a way--the book is incredibly imaginative, and just what a grown-up Alice story should be. It's well-written, delightfully weird, and scatter-shot with wince-inducing horror. AND A GIANT RABBIT. I couldn't turn the pages fast enough, and I'm very interested in seeing where the story goes next!

But I also am very disturbed by the rape of past, present, and possible future. And I'm bothered by the implication that all men, no matter how good, are susceptible to bring overcome by lust, even under the most horrifyingly extreme circumstances. So...mixed reactions from me because I feel so very strongly about the way women are treated in this book, and the view of men. Please note, however, the relatively high rating despite that. Probably best to judge for yourself if you're interested.

A bit more of a polish on this review at some point.
Profile Image for Evelyn (devours and digests words).
229 reviews613 followers
January 25, 2016
WARNING: Rape & sexual violence. I'm too pissed to let this subject slide off in my review.

I feel like head-banging the walls at how ‘oh-so-dark-and-morbid’ this book is. I can't even bring myself to say ‘This is so dark oMG!1!’ without feeling the need to roll my eyes off my sockets. Gross exaggeration there but I just can't take this book seriously when everything about it is so fucking flat and one-note with no complexity nor weight to it, and my god does this book tries too hard, too over-the-top to paint the picture of a brutal world. It outright angered me.

This is categorized as Adult, and rightly so because there are actual graphic details of maiming where you'll find yourself knee-deep in bloody entrails, and not to mention, there are a ton of raping and sex assault going on here. A LOT of it.

The way this book tosses out the brutality of rape like it's nothing more but a tool to make the story have that dark, adult and edgy spice to it felt so fucking cheap. If a character with a vagina enters the picture then it's rape alllllll the fucking way. That, or she's under the constant threats of rape. Even our Pretty Alice here wasn't spared except she was the only one who managed to fight off her assailant while the others cower, fall prey and waste away. Why? Because our special heroine needs equally special reasons to back up the fact that she's brave, noble and whatever-the-fuck-else that adds more appeal to her bland characterization.

If I look past all the ‘doom & gloom’, I see nothing much that I can compliment on other than a very strong, compelling beginning that nearly drove me up the wall with WANT when I read the sample chapter, but that was it. The only kicks I got was when Alice and Hatcher interacted together through a mouse hole that separates them, and the whole talk about the Jabberwocky intrigued me if only for a while. It all went to hell when I realize that I felt remote from all the characters here; I don't fear for them because things go too smoothly and convenient. I don't connect nor do I feel for them because the writing leans too much toward telling instead of showing. I have NO clear pictures of the sketchy world-building(the mediocre writing doesn't help either). The villains hardly made me quiver with fear in my socks since they're so laughingly one-dimensional who has no real depths or complex motives to them. I've read better retellings, better horror books and this is the weakest one so far.


Do I still recommend this? Only if you're willing to sidestep that broach of sensitive subject and take a tumble down the rabbit hole to a completely un-Wonderland then Alice might just be for you.


2.5 stars
Profile Image for Matthias.
107 reviews432 followers
March 7, 2017
With "Alice in Wonderland" Lewis Carroll has created a world that has taken root in many people's minds. Wonderland's mysterious inhabitants have entrenched themselves into our dreams as soon as we heard or read about them. It should come as no surprise then that this realm has spawned millions of references, not to mention the abundance of stories that sprouted in other minds, with Disney twists and darker turns, but always with the Cheshire's grin somewhere lurking about.

When I read Lewis Carroll's work for myself, I came away a bit disappointed. The story felt too disjointed, the characters not relatable enough, and beyond the first moments of awe through encountering such strange creatures and absurd landscapes lay a feeling of anticlimax. Maybe it's the vivid and highly appealing image that has been painted of Wonderland, or maybe it's the feeling that more could be discovered in the white rabbits's burrow, but despite my disillusionment something about the story keeps fascinating me. I think the true power of Wonderland is found in how it works differently in everybody's imagination. For some the set pieces that were created here have become molds for their own dreams, Wonderland being a river bed through which their own fantasies run their course. For me Wonderland used to be that place where imagination has gone the farthest, a horizon for my daydreams. Recently it also felt that it's where fancy has got the longest way ahead of it, as I dream of taking a left where Alice has taken a right.

Christina Henry is one of the many authors to have decided that more could be done with Wonderland, and her take on the matter has been largely met with praise. When I started this book I was skeptical of an author who had to make use of a "mold" to get her story out there. On the other hand, there is no better mold than the one that's got "Made in Wonderland" etched on the bottom, so I decided to give it a try.

And at first, I was highly entertained. The green grassy hills made way for an industrial city, the sparkling blue rivers have been replaced by green sludge and the merry cast of characters have become either bruised and battered victims or terrifying monsters. Alice herself is no longer the curious girl but a scared, scarred and confused woman who has to deal with the trauma of rape while being locked away in a mental institution. Dark clouds gather, fires erupt and another tumble down the rabbit hole ensues, only this time it's going to be bloody.

But as with the original, my initial enthusiastic feelings did not endure. Four stars became three and as I wrote this review it even dropped to two. This is because at some point the narrative was showing some symptoms of the Young Adult Literature-disease.

The first symptom: overexplanation, spoonfeeding of interpretations, making the implicit needlessly explicit. Juicy lines that are meant to grab the reader's interest are put in italics, just to make sure you can't miss their genius. Where Lewis Carroll left a lot of silhouettes in his shrouds of mystery, Christina Henry drags them out into the spotlight and explains them away. Nothing is left up to the imagination. As if it wasn't bad enough that the once magical characters suddenly had to have something as ridiculously mundane as motives, these motives also had to be clarified. In my book, that's akin to blasphemy in Wonderland.

The second symptom: bitterness. I don't know if it's a YA-thing specifically or a recent trend in literature as a whole, but the few stories I have read in the genre carry with them a certain bitterness that goes well with the dark atmosphere in which the protagonists wallow, a darkness that was specifically designed to account for such a supposedly mature sentiment. Like any bitterness, it carries whiffs of pomposity and leads to a certain class of philosophies such as "an eye for an eye" that sound all the more pertinent and alluring due to all the emotional baggage the reader is asked to hold on to.

As a side-symptom, the bitterness, as ever crowned with a false sense of moral highground and intellectual superiority, allowed the author to make a villain out of practically every character. While it was innovative to see the Walrus depicted as a ruthless ganglord in the beginning, it got old very quickly as all the other characters were made into something similar during the course of this story. This book felt more and more like black paint being splashed on a painting of a beautiful landscape. Darkness was spilled all over the place to such an extent that one wonders why the author didn't choose to do it on a blank canvas instead of spoiling such a pretty place. I guess for many it's the contrast that makes it work. It did for a long time for me too, but in the end there was little contrast left as darkness filled the entire frame.

I hoped this story would have been about coping, about wonderment after disillusionment or about finding comfort in magic as cold reality chills your bones, but it became something else altogether. This is a bitter tale of vengeance. Magic, love and mystery are just some tiny sprinkles added on this ultimately cold and saltless dish, and the abundance of blood does little to hide the lack of tension. My final assessment thus becomes two stars, as a testament to the Cheshire's enduring grin, while the rest vanished into darkness.
Profile Image for Alienor ✘ French Frowner ✘.
876 reviews4,172 followers
February 15, 2021


Bring it, Alice! I'm not scared. Oh, how I should have.

TRIGGER WARNING : Graphic rape (a lot) and violence



By no means is Alice a flawless book, and I'm not gonna lie, the first chapters, if they hooked me, confused me as hell in the same time. Who are these people? What do they want? What are their relationships like? Where the fuck are they? What's this world, where human traffic, rape and violence are common practices, where the awful way women are treated makes me want to scream?



To be honest, I always thought that Alice in Wonderland was weird as fuck and developed in an undercurrent of crazy violence, and here? Well. Christina Henry sure pictured the characters we know in the most terrifying light. I love this kind of retellings with passion, and despite the horror, I couldn't help but be mesmerized at all the magical and strange creatures we meet.

► Moreover, as long as it took for me to simply understand what was going on, it didn't influence my interest, not at any moment. From the first page I was intrigued, horrified, drowned into this sick journey of theirs. It started with my breath thinning, then gasping and struggling for air.



I was there with Alice, who coudn't annoy me even if she kept following Hatcher around, because after what she lived through, it made sense and she was lucid about her need and their somewhat unhealthy relationship. Perhaps this world forces her to be taken care of by a man, but nobody owns her, and she makes sure that everyone knows it. Fierce, fierce Alice - she's in no need of saving, after all. Trust me on this. And then, there's Hatcher. Hatcher whose madness took violent turns sometimes and whose mind we could never really trust, but Hatcher who was ready to do anything to protect her. Starting Alice, I didn't expect his character, and he surprised me in the best way possible.



This said, I won't say that their relationship didn't surprise or make me uncomfortable at times, because it did. What is it that they have? Love? Friendship? Whatever it is, its evolution is beautiful.

► Really, though? Their quest for revenge and blood captivated me and I rooted for them to kill these fuckers something fierce. Whoops.



This said, I didn't enjoy some parts of it (I'm not lying when I say that this book is really rape-y), and wanted for some men to go over the stereotyping lust (because really), that's why I can't bring myself to give it the full 5. If I never got the impression that rape was used as a plot device - but rather as a way to show how monstruous and excruciating this world is, and NEVER condoned in any way - I don't like the fact that (almost) all men are bad.

Thanks god for , really.

For more of my reviews, please visit:
Profile Image for Charlotte May.
836 reviews1,291 followers
July 1, 2019
3.5 ⭐️

“I wish I were a magician…I’d find all those lost girls and bring them home. I’d take all those men who hurt those girls and make them cry.”

Woah. This adds an entire new dimension to the word dark. If you can think of something gruesome, or violent, or harrowing – it’s probably in this book.

I read Lost Boy by Christina Henry, and although that story contained murder, and fighting and battle, it wasn’t nearly on the same scale as Alice was. This bordered on horror, for me at least.

Alice and Hatcher met while in a mental institution. Both have committed horrific crimes, though Alice can remember very little of her past – something to do with a rabbit, and being kidnapped. When the chance for them to escape arises, they grasp it with both hands and leg it. However, a shadow monster – the Jabberwocky, has also escaped the institution, and seems to be following them.

Alice and Hatcher must find a way to destroy the Jabberwocky, passing through the many areas of the Old City, meeting some familiar characters – but not as you would remember them. Alice is a far cry from the timid young girl we know from Lewis Carroll’s stories and from Disney. This Alice has seen some horrors, and will do whatever necessary to survive.

I did find this book entertaining, albeit slightly sickening in places, I’ll say I still preferred Lost Boy, as it remained truer to the original story than this one did. But I liked it enough that I will order the sequel from the library, and see what happens to Alice and Hatcher next.

“She must start believing in impossible things, for impossible things kept appearing before her eyes.”
Profile Image for Kelly (and the Book Boar).
2,797 reviews9,435 followers
January 21, 2016
Find all of my reviews at: http://52bookminimum.blogspot.com/

WARNING: MITCHELL WAS IN CHARGE OF GIFS TODAY SO THINGS MIGHT GO A LITTLE PEAR SHAPED

“Beware the jaws that bite, the claws that snatch . . .”

Confession time: I hate Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass and allllll of the movies that have been made from cartoon to Helena Bonham-Carter musey magic. It’s just never been my thing (save your anger – I’ll probably post something more offensive before this review is even over). That being stated, Alice probably would have remained on my TBR indefinitely were it not for the awesomeness of my Elf on the Shelf wonderfully wicked book fairy this Christmas.

Once I started reading Alice I was all “I gotta feeling (wooooo hoooo) that tonight’s gonna be a good night” . . . .



Ooooooh doggie. This ain’t yo grandmomma’s Lewis Carroll! Truly a fresh take that was inspired by the original. In this version, Alice is a resident of Old City’s nuthouse. Her only companionship comes from Hatcher, someone she can talk to/catch glimpses of through a mouse hole near the floor and who didn’t get his nickname over a hat . . . .

Palm Springs commercial photography

Alice didn’t always live in Old City, though. Nooooooo, once upon a time Alice was a fair-haired beauty from the right side of the tracks – a/k/a New City. But Alice wanted to experience a little taste of the dark side of life. Boy did she *shudder*.

Fastforward back to the present where Alice and Hatcher have a chance to escape the hospital. However, their only chance of survival is to kill the Jaberwocky . . .

Palm Springs commercial photography

No, Mitchell, not the dance troupe. An even more terrifying creation.

In order to come face-to-face with the darkest of all evils, Alice and Hatcher must deal with the various local crime bosses, including Cheshire . . .

Palm Springs commercial photography

the Caterpillar . . .

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the Walrus . . .

Palm Springs commercial photography
(Alrighty then. Coo coo ca choo to you too, Mitchell.)

And last, but most certainly not least, the Rabbit . . .



Things are even more treacherous than they appear (and they already appear pretty crappy, right?) as Alice must make her way through the seedy underbelly of a city whose criminals earn their money via kidnapping young girls and forcing them into the sex trade.

This story was D.A.R.K. and oh so very stabby. Do not say I didn’t warn you. If you’re looking for a cuddly cartoon version of Alice, you should most definitely look elsewhere. On the other hand, if you’re like me and are looking for something more like this . . .

Palm Springs commercial photography

I highly recommend Christina Henry’s spin on things. All the Stars. Many thanks to my friend Christopher for putting this on the radar for me.

This selection was chosen as part of the Winter Reading Challenge my library puts on each year. Four more books and the limited edition coffee mug will be MIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIINE!

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Profile Image for Dan Schwent.
3,183 reviews10.8k followers
November 29, 2016
After her disastrous encounter with the Rabbit, Alice is confined to an insane asylum in the Old City. When a fire breaks out, she escapes the asylum with Hatcher, the axe-murdering inmate next door. However, the Jabberwock is on the loose as well, and to stop him, Alice will have to cross paths with the Rabbit once again...

Confession time: While I whiled away many a day playing Dungeons and Dragons, most of today's doorstop-sized fantasy novels don't hold a lot of interest for me. Alice, however, is another animal entirely.

While it has its roots in Lewis Caroll's familiar tales, Alice has a lot more in common with works like The Magicians and The Child Thief, deconstructions of older genre works. It bites like a horror novel at times and I was happy to let the bloody juices run down my chin.

Alice is not for the squeamish. She escapes the Rabbit's warren after he rapes her and soon finds herself locked up. Many figures from the earliest iterations of Alice's adventures are present and are crime bosses, many of them trafficking in women, in addition to their other vices.

The world building in Alice was exquisite, a Victorian era society where the rich live in the New City while the majority of people live in the dog eat dog world of the Old City, a world controlled by crime lords like The Walrus, Mr. Carpenter, The Caterpillar, Cheshire, and, of course, The Rabbit.

Aided by Hatcher, who may be an incarnation of The Mad Hatter, Alice goes careening through the back allies of the Old City, going up against all sorts of miscreants, discovering her birthright, and facing her darkest fears. That, and there is a shit load of violence. What more could a guy ask for?

Apart from thinking the ending was a little anti-climactic, I don't have anything bad to say about this book. It was creepy, unsettling, brutal, and a damn captivating read. It kicked a serious amount of ass and Christina Henry can come to my tea party any time. 4.5 out of 5 stars.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Helen 2.0.
472 reviews1,615 followers
August 25, 2024
I’ve read several horror novels by Christina Henry at this point, so I thought I knew what to expect from this one. Turns out, the author got her start writing urban fantasy/paranormal romance, then slowly transitioned into pure horror, and this series seems to stand at the midpoint of that journey…and it shows.

The idea of an urban horror retelling of Alice in Wonderland is awesome. The disjointed madness of the original already lends itself beautifully to the horror genre, and many of the themes there can be superimposed onto an urban hellscape.

Basically, I thought I was in for unreliable narration, surreal settings, and whimsical story elements getting warped into horrifying ones. A story somewhere between imagination and reality.

Alice actually reads more like a paranormal romance with horror elements sprinkled in. As a PNR series it was interesting. If I’d gone in with that expectation, I probably would have enjoyed it more.

The story revolves around Alice, the protagonist, discovering her own power and following her destiny with her love interest. Not a whole lot of space for whimsy, madness, and surrealism.

Most of the horror relies on pervasive and graphic displays of violence against women. It largely feels meaningless and gratuitous, seemingly added for shock value and not tied well into the setting or the character arcs. I think that if you’re going to heavily lean on depictions of violence against a marginalized group, you’d better have a really good reason for including those in your story.

I’ll probably finish the duet, now that I can adjust my expectations for book 2.
Profile Image for shakespeareandspice.
353 reviews511 followers
February 6, 2016
All the no-no’s:

-development of characters is nonexistent
The book opens in full force and while that’s sort of fun if you’re excited about adventures, Alice as the main character is never fully developed (that could be said about pretty much everyone in the novel). Admittedly since this book is a “retelling” of Alice in Wonderland, I can understand why the author would think we should already be familiar with Alice’s character but given how far away from the original character this book’s Alice is, I needed more.

-not well written
Connecting to the first problem here, the novel mostly feels like a series of “this happened, and then this happened, and then this happened” with no strong exposition, base, or point.

-Hatcher
Hatcher is a problem. For the first half, I was unconcerned with his character…until we come to a scene where Hatcher and Alice are in a room full of women being raped, tortured, and abused and Alice sees a flicker of “hunger” in Hatcher’s eyes. Now Alice seems pretty aware that Hatcher is a dangerous man (I don’t understand why she’s in a relationship with him knowing that, but that’s another issue), but the fact that she seemed more concerned with the regrets Hatcher would have if he did something about this “hunger” was a big, fat problem for me. Alice even seems somewhat concerned about what Hatcher might do to her after seeing all these girls in the room and for the life of me, I do not understand why her major concern remained that Hatcher would feel awful afterward. Fuck Hatcher. Run!

Secondly, and this was a surprise given how much I already didn’t like Hatcher at this point, something about Hatcher’s past is revealed and that “past memory” makes his “hunger” situation even worse. I honestly didn’t think it could get any worse then it was but…wow. For those of you who don’t care about being spoiled, I’ll share what his dirty little secret is: In general, Alice keeps implying that Hatcher really does want to save people, but this “hunger” thing brings this entire book down for me.

Generally, the romanticizing of Hatcher’s character. Big. Fat. No.

-too much rape
How is this kind of society even supposed to function? All women are constantly under the terror of being raped, abducted, sold, tortured, etc. and majority of all men seem like predators (including Hatcher). What the what.

-did this need to be a “retelling”?
This is a minor issue but since I am not as familiar with retellings as others might be, I have to question whether this story really needed to be introduced as a “retelling” of Alice in Wonderland. It felt like everything that happens could’ve been used to tell a whole fantasy story of it’s own. Because of my lack of attachment to the characters and the immaturity of the novel, sometimes I was just downright irritable that the author muddled one of my favorite stories to produce a really shitty version of her own.
Profile Image for Beverly.
949 reviews444 followers
June 26, 2023
A bit of a disappointment, after it started out so fantastically with Alice and Hatcher (the Mad Hatter) stuck in adjoining cells of an insane asylum, Alice never really lived up to it's early promise. I love the original story and always have. Why? I think because Alice was a very polite, but self-possessed young girl. She is quite up to all the silliness and rudeness that the creatures of Wonderland can dish out.

This "Alice", is scared and scarred; she has to regain herself and a sense of outrage as the story goes along. I don't care for a weak Alice. Also, the world she and Hatcher live in is some sort of dystopian Victorian era, in which women and girls are victims and have no defense against rape, kidnapping, trafficking, and gruesome mutilation and murder. So, no, it just didn't work for me. Three stars because of the awesome beginning, when I didn't know where I would end up and anything seemed possible.
Profile Image for Melissa ♥ Dog/Wolf Lover ♥ Martin.
3,629 reviews11.5k followers
August 17, 2015
www.melissa413readsalot.blogspot.com

What a darktastic ride through wonderland accept... this isn't the wonderland most may be used to... this place is called Old City and it's not somewhere you want to find yourself.

Years ago Alice went from her home in New City with a supposed friend into Old City out of stupidity if you ask me....only Alice came out... and dear Alice was never the same again.

Alice is put in a mental hospital in the Old City by her parents for the rest of her life. You see you can't have crazy in New City, you have to be perfect there. And poor Alice who kept screaming about a rabbit and had been attacked in a most horrible way was labeled crazy.

Alice has one friend in the asylum and his name is Hatcher. After so many long years in the asylum, one night there is a fire and they escape, but so does a creature that is out to destroy everything in his path.

This book is full of darkness. There isn't anything sweet or cutsie about it. People and things are slayed, raped, twisted, changed, sold, bought... you get the picture. BUT. Alice finds out she has power beyond her imagination and she is pretty bad to the bone and so is Hatcher.

I really liked all of the things Alice and Hatcher go through together. I love their characters. I love all of the things they do all in the name of vengeance. There is nothing like getting revenge on those that have hurt you and avenge other innocents that have been hurt. A brilliant, bloody-ride through Old City with a little spark of goodness at the end. So, I guess I lied, there is a little ray of sunshine ;)

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Profile Image for Nandakishore Mridula.
1,327 reviews2,646 followers
January 7, 2016
By all means, I should have hated this novel. It subverts one of my absolute childhood favourites into a story that is so dark, that you are left gasping for breath many a time. Don't take what I say lightly - this book is not for the faint-hearted. If you are put off by scenes of rape, torture and misery, please stay away - Christina Henry just piles it on.

Then why did I give it four stars? Well, as a horror novel, it is just one dark rollercoaster ride. Once you mount, there is no way to get down - you shriek, scream, hold on for dear life, maybe piss in your pants - but you stay on, till the ride is finished.

And what a ride!

The original Alice followed a white rabbit, fell down a rabbit hole, had all those weird yet pleasant adventures, and woke up from an afternoon nap in the end. For the Alice in this story, the rabbit hole is the Old City, the den of iniquity which borders the New City, where the nice folks live - but it is a nightmare she enters: raped and mutilated, she wakes up to madness in an asylum. Escaping from there during a fire in the company of "Hatcher", an axe-murderer, her assignment in life is to find the magical talisman required to kill "The Jabberwock", a monster which was incarcerated along with them in the madhouse.

The original characters from Alice are here, but twisted beyond recognition. The Jabberwock, from a nonsense poem in Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There, becomes the book's frightening arch-nemesis. The Carpenter, the Walrus, the Rabbit, the Caterpillar and the Cheshire Cat are all gangland bosses who control the Old City. Most of them deal in girls - and it is in the description of these dens of "pleasure" that the author outdoes herself.

Psychiatrists say that pain and pleasure are separated by a very narrow boundary in the brain. Maybe therein lies the fascination of BDSM and torture porn - I have mentioned elsewhere the horrifying fascination the posters of hell exercised on me, with all those naked souls shown being cut, impaled and burnt. In this book, Christina has plumbed those depths to the utmost. The Caterpillar mutilates and keeps girls in cages for his "collection"; the Walrus eats the girls as he rapes them - the book is full of such things, described in graphically precise imagery. As the author expertly skirts the pain-pleasure boundary, we are forced to follow along, wishing for the end but still willing it to go on.

A must-read for avid horror fans - but for others, read it at your own risk.
Profile Image for mark monday.
1,851 reviews6,204 followers
April 29, 2024
this is so badly written and yet so readable. how can such tripe make me want to turn the pages faster, faster, faster? I dunno, but gee whiz, this sure stunk and yet I devoured it in like two sittings.

so a mad Alice, shorn of her basic traits of curiosity and sensibility (did the author even read the source material?), along with an equally mad hatchet-wielding murderer (who I assume will be revealed as the Mad Hatter in a subsequent book), escape from a burning asylum and travel through Old City to hunt down the Jabberwock. it turns out that Alice is also a Magician, because why not. the two are in love, because why not. Old City is a violent slum ruled by various magical pimps at war with each other, named the Carpenter, the Walrus, the Caterpillar, and the Rabbit, because why not. this grotesque sequel to Alice in Wonderland is all about the many, many, many horrible ways that girls can be trafficked, raped, abused, mutilated, and murdered, because why not.

if only the writing didn't read like amateurish fan fiction, I could have tolerated it as some kind of creepy, exceedingly dark fantasy adventure. the ideas are not uninteresting. I would love to read a book that has adult versions of the Caterpillar and the Cheshire Cat, two really fun and interesting (and dark) characters in the source material. but the author's lack of ability with characterization made all of her Wonderland villains equally flat and annoying. it's like her approach to characterization is to build a whole character around one usually horrible idea, and then leave it at that. and so these monstrous pimps mutilate girls (the Caterpillar) or devour them during rape (the Walrus), or they like roses and secrets (Cheshire), and that's about all we get. these are not interesting villains.

Christina Henry also does that incredibly annoying thing that many bad writers do: she repeats what just happened as a summary, right after whatever happens happened. is this to increase page count? it occurs so many times. almost as many times as her Alice repeatedly asking questions about what just happened or what is now happening or what will happen next. I think I've written "happen" too many times, maybe I'm just as bad a writer as Christina Henry?

it suddenly occurred to me why this book was so readable! the writing is so very bad, so nonsensical at times, that it somehow mirrors the madness of Alice. it just yammers away. or perhaps it just mirrors the nonsense of the original? I realize I'm grasping at straws here. anyway, this book was nonsense and not the good kind.
Profile Image for Jenna ❤ ❀  ❤.
893 reviews1,790 followers
December 23, 2019
Another brilliant re-telling by Christina Henry -- the Grimm Brothers would be proud! This book is every bit as gruesome as their original tales, perhaps more so. In spite of the darkness and gore, I was enthralled!
Profile Image for Natalie Monroe.
638 reviews3,851 followers
March 4, 2017
3.75 stars

"Do not go seeking the Rabbit, else you wish for more death and madness."




Are you ready for the darkest, most fucked up retelling of Alice in Wonderland yet?

Like The Child Thief, Alice has all the elements of the original classic, but dusts off the powdered sugar and lets you see the darkness underneath.

Madness isn't whimsical—it's horrifying.

Years ago, Alice (the character) went down the rabbit hole and came back mad. Blood slicked her thighs as a result of rape. She resides in an asylum at the beginning of the novel until a sudden fire lets her escape. Her friend Hatcher, who lived in the room next to hers, tells her a monster called the Jabberwocky escaped too and they have to hunt it down. To do that, they have to confront Alice's forgotten past and her rapist—the Rabbit.

I feel obligated to mention that rape is a key theme within the narrative. Aside from Alice, the villains rape and torture lots of other girls.

“The wings were not attached to her shoulders by straps. The girl’s back had been cut from the top of her shoulder to the bottom of her rib cage on both sides of her spine. The beautiful butterfly wings were neatly sewn into the exposed muscle. As the girl flexed her shoulders, the wings would beat.”


I've spent some time thinking whether its use is gratuitous or necessary, but can't come to a good decision. But I do like that Alice doesn't judge the other girls. For instance, a mermaid was imprisoned and raped for years at the Caterpillar's. After Alice sets her free, the mermaid is shown to have a proud, rather unpleasant personality and resents Alice for taking away her right to kill her captor. It would be so easy to paint the mermaid as an ungrateful bitch, but it doesn't happen. Alice acknowledges they'll never be friends and they go their separate ways. The inclusion of hateful women without turning it into girl-hate is a rare gem in fiction, and I'm really glad Christina Henry went down that path.

And while there's romance, it doesn't overwhelm the plot. It's not portrayed as a miracle cure either. Alice's trauma isn't magically cured nor is Hatcher's.

The world-building is admittedly sparse. It's not bad, just lacking in detail. But it's to be forgiven given Alice and Hatcher's mental states and that they're running for their lives pretty much the entire book.

I sort of want Alice the book to be longer, yet also stay the way it is. If it were longer, the world and characters could have been fleshed out a bit more. But its current length works well in terms of pacing. We know enough about the characters to be invested and really, that's all a good story needs.

The ending was a little... simple? I don't know how to explain it. I just expected more in a way. But it fits overall.

Still, those problems are tiny things. The book in general is lovely. Well, not lovely. It's dark. Grotesque. Fucked up.

And a damn good retelling.

Profile Image for K.
302 reviews694 followers
June 2, 2017
"Alice, what are you doing?"
"Following the white rabbit, of course."




Well well well what a wonderful surprise this was. Might review it in future sometimes.
Profile Image for ♛Tash.
223 reviews226 followers
November 6, 2015



I haven’t read Lewis Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland.




I have watched several movie versions of it though, and I have to say that I am not a fan of Alice in Wonderland in general. It has always come off to me as the bad side of trippy, so needless to say I was wary of this Alice in Wonderland retelling.

“That was the trouble with not being right in the head. You couldn’t always tell if your eyes were telling the truth.”

Our Alice is in this story is not a pre-teen, but a woman in her late twenties who has been institutionalized for the better part of the decade. She doesn’t remember why she was institutionalized. She only gets fleeting memories of a tea party, a man with rabbit ears, bruises on her thighs and blood. Lots of blood. Who knew a tea party could be so scary?

Yes, I should I just put it out there as a TRIGGER WARNING, sexual violence abound in this book so if you’re squeamish, approach with caution or avoid completely.

Alice’s solace is her friend Hatcher whom she talks to through a mouse-hole in between their cells, and whose memories are riddled with holes just like Alice’s. Then one night, a fire in the asylum gives Alice and Hatcher a chance to escape, but it also sets something else free. The fire also frees the Jabberwock, an ancient evil bent on destruction. Together, Alice and Hatcher, need to find a way to destroy the Jabberwock, so they are compelled to seek out the cunning and brutal godfathers – Cheshire, Caterpillar, Walrus and Mr. Carpenter – of the Old City. Their quest to end the Jabberwock also puts Alice’s and Hatcher’s dark pasts into painful focus.

Thankfully, my aforementioned wariness was for nothing since I ended up immensely enjoying Alice. Sure, I felt icky while reading it, but that’s because the world-building in Alice is so atmospheric I felt the griminess of the streets and the dank filth of the warrens. Shudders. The Old City is the Wonderland, where Alice falls through the rabbit hole.This is certainly has one of the most imaginative deconstruction of a famed fairytale setting. The author put in all the familiar elements of Lewis Carroll’s Wonderland and gave them dark twists that perfectly suits every turn of this retelling.

The characters were superbly written as well, Alice is nothing like the Alice we all know. Alice started out as a seemingly fragile character, an inmate who has all but given up, but as the book moves along she develops into a tough-as-nails heroine I can totally get behind. She’s scarred and broken, but she doesn’t want to be fixed, she howls for vengeance. Hatcher is also a terrific character. He’s manic and unflinching, and completely mad with moments of lucidity.

“Can you feel him, Hatch? I can,” she said.
“Like a great bird that fills up the sky with its wings.”


Story-wise, this bears little resemblance with the original, but the plot, the foreshadowing and the build-up were remarkably carried-out and, thankfully, none too excessive with the weirdness. Don’t you just hate it when weird shit happen just for weirdness’ sake? There’s none of that here, all elements, even the prodigious gore and violence, serve a purpose more than just to shock or disgust. Gritty, dark, fast-paced and violent, Alice is a highly recommended read for fans of horror and fantasy.
Profile Image for Lotte.
53 reviews37 followers
April 2, 2017
This is supposedly a horror/dark fantasy retelling of Alice in Wonderland, so I was prepared for it to be scary. What I was not prepared for was 300 pages of sexual violence. Every womans life in this book seems to revolve around the constant threat of rape. And apart from the main character almost none of the female characters are given a personality beyond 'sad sex slave'. They're really just there as a constant reminder to the reader of just how ~edgy and disturbing~ the book is supposed to be compared to its source material.

It has nothing to do with horror. It's just gratuitous and depressing. Apart from that, the storyline was super repetitive (walking, killing an evil rapist monster, more walking...) and the ending was anticlimatic as hell.

Before I started to write this review I gave the book two stars, but the more I think about it the more I dislike it, so one star it is.
Profile Image for Katie.dorny.
1,141 reviews643 followers
October 6, 2019
I enjoyed this; I’m interested to see how Hatcher and Alice’s relationship plays out in the second book.

The horror was not as much as you would think for this book but it definitely had gothic elements.

But it was the most imaginative Alice in wonderland retelling I have ever read. Alice and Hatcher meet in an Asylum, with the Jabberwocky trapped with them. Each classic character comes into play in different ways - it’s a very interesting and modern take and one I really enjoyed.

It was a creepy theme throughout and it was definitely mind bending, the Hatcher was amazing - and Alice did grow up at the end. Excited to read the finale in the duology.
Profile Image for Auntie Terror.
472 reviews111 followers
April 23, 2020
4.4 stars. How could you not love a broken heroine who, on the brink of desperation with the horrors of her past and present, goes "nah - crying won't help" - and then gets on with tormenting and killing bad guys instead? [Prtf]
Profile Image for Dream.M.
965 reviews573 followers
June 12, 2024
کمتر کسیه که متولد ۱۸۶۵ به بعد باشه و کتاب« آلیس در سرزمین عجایب» رو نخونده باشه یا حداقل داستان اورجینالش نوشته «لوییس کارول» رو بعنوان قصه شب نشنیده باشه. حتی اگر کسی جزو هیچکدوم از این دسته ها نباشه، دیگه مطمئنم اقتباس «ریچ تروبلاد  ۱۹۸۸ » رو از این کتاب دیده و می‌دونه داستان از چه قراره. و اگه بازم نه، دیگه نمیتونم باور کنم که کسی اقتباس عجیب و جذاب« تیم برتون ۲۰۱۰» رو از آلیس با بازی «جانی دپ» ندیده باشه.
بنابراین اگه احیانا جزو هیچکدوم از این افراد نیستید، این ریویوو برای شما نیست. (شوخی کردم بابا، شمام بخونید شاید یچیزی یاد گرفتید)
حاوی اسپویل:
داستان اورجینال «آلیس در سرزمین عجایب»، ماجرای سفر خیالی و هیجان انگیز دختر کوچولوی هفت ساله ای به اسم آلیس به سرزمین خیالی و جادویی هستش که دروازه ورودیش سوراخ لونه خرگوش توی حیاط خونه آلیسه. قصه از جایی شروع میشه که یه بعدازظهر گرم و کسل کننده،آلیس کوچولوی بازیگوش توی حیاط با خواهر بزرگ‌ترش نشسته و خواهرش کتاب میخونه. آلیس که حوصله اش سررفته و کمی خواب‌آلود شده با دیدن خرگوش پشمالوی سفیدی که توی باغچه ها میجهه شروع به خیال‌بافی میکنه و عجیب ترین اتفاقاتی که ممکن یه دختر بچه قرن نوزدهمی تجربه کنه رو تجربه می‌کنه( که البته تهش معلوم میشه همه چی خواب بوده و خانواده های سختگیر و مقید اون دوره رو از نگرانی درمیاره). این کتاب یه جلد دوم هم داره به اسم «آن سوی آینه» که هیشکی نخونده.
از سال ۱۸۶۵ که داستان «آلیس در سرزمین عجایب» نوشته شده تا الان، از این داستان اقتباس های زیادی صورت گرفته. یکی از این اقتباس ها رمان دارک فانتزی «آلیس» نوشته «کریستینا هنری ۲۰۱۵» هستش که این ریویوو مربوط به همین کتابه. «آلیس» اولین جلد از سه گانه خانم هنری هستش که داستانش به طور کلی با اونچه که از «آلیس در سرزمین عجایب » میدونید و گفتم متفاوته. یه شباهت های ریزی با اقتباس برتون داره ولی خب در حد تنه زدن و نه بیشتر.
توی این رمان، چندتا از  شخصیت های اصلی و مهم رمان اورجینال رو داریم، مثل «خرگوش سفید جلیقه پوش»، «گربه چشایر» با اون لبخند ترسناک، «کلاهدوز دیوانه»، «کاترپیلار » با اون قلیونش و صد البته خود «آلیس». اما تمام این شخصیت ها خیلی بدجنس و شیطانی هستند و توی منطقه ای به اسم «شهر قدیمی» مثل مافیا حکومت میکنن و دنیا رو به فساد میکشونن.
رمان از جایی تعریف میشه که آلیس الان ۲۶ سالشه ، ده ساله توی تیمارستان زندانیه و هیشکی سراغش رو نمیگیره و تقریباً هیچی از گذشته خودش ، اینکه چرا زندانی شده و چرا باهاش مثل دیوانه ها رفتار میشه یادش نیست. تنها گاهی وقتا با لمس کردن جای زخم بزرگی که روی سمت چپ صورتش از گوش تا لبش کشیده شده، صحنه ای رو به یاد میاره که درحال خونریزی شدیده، چاقویی توی دستشه و فرار می‌کنه و مرتب میگه خرگوش سفید خرگوش سفید....
به تازگی توی سلول بغلی آلیس مردی رو آوردن به اسم هچر که از سوراخ دیوار نزدیک کف زمین آلیس رو میبینه و باهاش حرف میزنه. هچر قاتله و بعد از اینکه تبر به دست بالای جسد مثله شده ۵ مرد گیرافتاده، آوردنش تیمارستان. اون هم تقریبا حافظه اش رو از دست داده ولی بطور غریزی امید داره که به‌زودی آزاد میشه.
اما شروع ماجرا از اینجاست که آلیس توی سلولش خوابیده و بوی دود میشنوه، و بعد می‌فهمه تیمارستان آتیش گرفته . بعد هچر موفق میشه از سلولش فرار کنه و آلیس رو هم نجات میده. اونا دوتایی از تیمارستان در حال سوختن فرار میکنن و همه آدمای اونجا رو در حال مرگ رها میکنن، حتی توی راه چند نفرم می‌کشن. هچر بدون اینکه بدونه چطوری، راه فرار رو بلده و آلیس رو به شهر قدیمی می‌بره که یجورایی حلبی آباد اون سرزمین محسوب میشه و در مجاورت شهر جدید قرار داره که محل زندگی ثروتمندان و حاکمان سرزمینه. شهر قدیم شهریه که هرجور جنایت و کثافتی توش عادیه و مردمش با بدبختی زندگی میکنن ولی سعی هم نمیکنن ازش بیرون بیان. البته بخوایم صادق باشیم باید بگم سعی کردنشون هم اصولا فایده نداره.
هچر مرتبا از هیولای سیاه سایه واری به اسم جابروکی حرف میزنه که داره تعقیبش می‌کنه و موقع سوختن تیمارستان از زیرزمین اونجا آزاد شده. این هیولا از خون و گوشت آدما تغذیه می‌کنه اما هیشکی ام ندیده اونو و فقط هچر حسش می‌کنه.
توی سفر ادیسه وار هچر و آلیس، کم کم پرده های فراموشی از حافظه شون کنار می‌ره و میفهمن چه بلایی سرشون اومده. آلیس یادش میاد که نیروی جادویی خاصی داره و بخاطر همین نیرو در ۱۶ سالگی توسط دوستش «دری» گول خورده و به خرگوش سفید فروخته شده، و خرگوش بهش تجاوز کرده و صورتش رو زخمی کرده تا همیشه با این علامت بتونه پیداش کنه. وقتی خرگوش می‌خواسته آلیس رو به کلاهدوز بفروشه ، آلیس میزنه چشم خرگوش رو کور می‌کنه و فرار می‌کنه اما وقتی به خونه میرسه، هیشکی حرفش رو باور نمیکنه و میفرستنش تیمارستان .
هچر هم یادش میاد که دختر کوچولوش توسط خرگوش سفید دزدیده شده و زنش هم توسط افراد خرگوش کشته شده و اونم وقتی رفته انتقام زن و بچشو بگیره، دستگیر و زندانی میشه.
حالا هچر و آلیس می‌خوان خرگوش رو بکشن ولی قبلش باید دختر هچر «جنی» رو پیدا کنن و جابروکی رو که داره مردم شهر قدیم رو قتل عام می‌کنه نابود کنند... این وسط یه جریانات عشقی هم بین آلیس و هچر پیش میاد که فضا رو تلطیف کنه اما نمیتونه.
توی پایان این جلد از مجموعه ، آلیس و هچر بعد کلی جادوگری و آدم کشی، خرگوش و کلاهدوز و کاترپیلار رو می‌کشن و جابروکی رو اسیر میکنن و شهر به دست گربه چشایر میفته. اون دو نفر هم میرن دنبال پیدا کردن جنی که به تاجری در شرق فروخته شده و الان اسمش سحر شده....
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و اما درباره کتاب آلیس ، راستش بنظرم این کتاب بعنوان یه اقتباس، یا بعنوان یک دوباره خوانی از یک داستان نوستالژیک ، چندان چنگی به دل نمی‌زند. اگر چه شخصیت پردازی آلیس و هچر خوب و کامل بود، اما بقیه شخصیت ها هیچ پرداختی نداشتند و اصلا علت رفتارهاشون مشخص نبود. میتونم بگم تا نیمه کتاب به شدت مجذوب هیجان و تعلیق داستان بودم ولی بعدش که معما حل شد دیگه جذابیت هم کم شد و میشد حدس زد پایان داستان قراره آلیس پیروز بشه. آخرین مبارزه داستان، شکست جابروکی، هم که واقعا ماست‌مالی بود...
میزان زیادی از جنایت، تجاوز و خشونت هم توی داستان وجود داره که البته من هیچ مشکلی باهاش نداشتم و خب بنظرم بدجور داستان گوگولی آلیس رو دارک کرده که باحاله.
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فعلا قصد ندارم دو جلد بعدی مجموعه رو بخونم، چون هزارتا کتاب نصفه دارم که باید. تمومشون کنم. اما ممکنه بعدا بخونم ببینم تکلیف ملکه و شاه و جنی چی میشه و کجای ماجرا چکار میکنن.
Profile Image for Phrynne.
3,959 reviews2,666 followers
April 25, 2017
I would probably have never read this but it was suggested for a Challenge ( thanks Teneal) and I have to say I liked it!
It is quite a remarkable book actually and Alice in Wonderland will never look the same again. In this rewrite Alice has been placed in an insane asylum due to her belief that she went down a rabbit hole and met a talking rabbit. From there we descend into what is really a horror story as Alice meets again the Rabbit, the Walrus, Cheshire and others only in quite different forms from the original. There is a lot of blood, violence and rape so it is definitely not a fairy story.
I enjoyed this reinterpretation and intend to read the next book as well:)
Profile Image for Elena Salvatore.
222 reviews114 followers
July 4, 2018
“If you go chasing your freedom your fate will only follow you there and force you back.”


Alice doesn't remember how she got here or what sent her here, all she knows is that she's a patient in an insane asylum and the voice of the person next to her room.
Even when he tells her crazy things, she doesn't have any choice but to listen to him. He's the only person that talks to her and she isn't even sure that he's a person.
That is until the asylum is up in flames and with the help from him she flees from it.
But he keeps talking about a Jabberwock and the need to kill him. He also knows where to go and what to do even if he doesn't has any recollection of how he knows.

In the journey they're taking to kill the Jabberwock, Alice starts remembering thing too. She remembers a man with white gloves that chased her.
She soon realizes that her visions are memories and that there is a reason she is the one to kill the Jabberock, while she takes a dangerous journey to her past.




I was promised a creepy Alice retelling and I kinda feel cheated.
Don't get me wrong, the story is bizare and there are some parts that are just sick and twisted but it still wasn't the "horror" story that I was anticipating.
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To be fair, I should start off saying that I was in a reading slump while powering through this book so this could a big factor that I didn't like it.
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The story did have some creepy aspects and I would want to be caught dead in the World this takes place but it's written purposely to shock you more than anything else.
It is monstrous and disgusting and it did end up freaking me out because of it, but that's were the creepiness ends.

But be warned, this book does contains explicit writing that contains abuse, rape, humanoid creatures that eat people, killing and other things.
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I honestly didn't care at all about the characters. All I wanted to see was the White Rabbit and what happened between him and Alice but the ending was one of the most anticlimatic endings I've ever read.
We go through the book having the main villain be the White Rabbit
Profile Image for BAM doesn’t answer to her real name.
2,031 reviews452 followers
April 12, 2019
I wavered in my rating. I think the author completely missed her niche with this. The book is full of gore. Violence and bloodshed , cannibalism-it’s all there. But what is introduced and barely touched upon is the sex. We are told the various male offenders (the Walrus, the Rabbit, etc) kidnap and rape young women, often entrapping them and maiming them. But NONE of that is described. Why? The fighting and killing is detailed. This series could have pushed an erotic envelope.
As it is it reaches a YA audience who may have an Alice fetish. So what? Don’t get me wrong the “many years later” is always an interesting premise and being stuck in a looney bin while underworld bosses wreak havoc in the Old City having assaulted the eponymous character when she was a child is almost daring. I’ve added book two of the series to my Audible wish list to see where this goes.
Profile Image for destini.
235 reviews490 followers
February 25, 2016
"Alice! What are you doing?"
"Following the white rabbit, of course."


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Instead, we'll just have to settle for 4 stars.

How exceptionally creepy this story was! It's been a really long time since I last read a horror novel and I hadn't realize how much I missed it until I picked up Alice. You're led by the hand, thinking you're going to encounter a fairytale and instead wake up in a nightmare.

Christina Henry got really creative with this retelling. I had always been a fan of the original, have reading the book and watched the movies, and there was something about this "fairytale" that always fascinated me. This twisted retelling had me thinking back to the Grimm tales and other storytellers who's story had been edited in order to fit the fairytale mold. Mulan, Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty . . . its original tale is much more dark and much more fascinating (I promise I'm not a weirdo).

Alice begins in a mental institution, years after Alice encountered the Rabbit. She has no recollection of her time spent in his presence, save for a few vague details and the nightmares that haunt her. What commences is sordid affair of Jabberwocks, bloody axes, white rabbits, and enough graphic detail to leave you chilled. Part of the fun was trying to piece together her memory and figure out what happened to her all those years ago and why it's relevant present day.
When they found her all she would say was, "The Rabbit. The Rabbit. The Rabbit." Over and over.
When she acted like that they said she was mad. Alice knew she wasn't mad. Maybe.

I don't want to give too much away, having felt that going in blind really contributed to the reading experience, but it was really interesting to see how the author tied in the original content with her own interpretation. Why I am a big fan of retellings (done right) is because of the author's ability to weave a unique story while keeping the essence of the original story.


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Trigger warning:
The main reason this didn't bother me, as many others have stated in their review, is because these actions, especially the were never condoned but the character or the author.


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