![]() ![]() He later changed his mind about the remainder copies, announcing in an ad. He offered to exchange new copies to anyone who had one of the sixty. Only 60 copies were released before Carroll insisted the remainder were destroyed, leading to the book being out of print until 1897. Illustrations had been over-printed and pages badly folded to such a degree that he threatened to terminate his contract with Macmillan, similar to his experience with the first edition of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (1865). Lewis Carroll rejected the publication as it was riddled with faults and errors from the printing process. ![]() This 1893 third edition, sixtieth thousand issue of ‘T hrough the Looking Glass and What Alice Found There‘, is one of the most rare and sought after of all Lewis Carroll titles. Description Through the Looking Glass – suppressed sixtieth thousand 1893 issue – Lewis Carroll ![]()
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