![]() Much like Alice's life has changed over the years, she says so too have our ways of consuming stories. Parry says the magnitude of her book is meant to reinforce the experience of reading a physical book, something that she fears has fallen by the wayside thanks to technology. and works in advertising and Humpty Dumpty is now a political activist. She shares a summer home with the Cheshire Cat, the time-stricken White Rabbit goes by the name W.R. She writes journal entries that share the details of what it's like for her to live in the modern, digital world and provides updates on all of the classic characters. The story is penned from the perspective of a grown Alice. Facade Festival 2016 lights up the Vancouver Art Gallery.$7M art collection gifted anonymously to Museum of Anthropology.Haisla artist carves gold in new Vancouver art exhibition.In fact, she's opened up a new art installation titled To Have and To Holdthat features her own sequel to her favourite childhood story in the form of a nearly two-meter-tall book. Parry grew up to be many things: a child and youth care practitioner, a professional artist and most recently a short story writer. "It was probably the only book I had as a kid - so I loved Alice," she told host Sheryl MacKay on CBC's North by Northwest. When Penny Parry was just an infant, her parents bought a hard copy of Alice in Wonderland to read to her every night before she went to bed.
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