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After reading 2166 websites, we found 20 different results for "Who wrote The Looking Glass Wars"
Frank Beddor
Frank Beddor wrote The Looking Glass Wars, which reimagines the Alice in Wonderland story and includes real-life characters such as the Liddells and Prince Leopold.
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a 1965 spy novel by John le Carré
The Looking Glass War is a 1965 spy novel by John le Carré.
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Lewis Carroll
The search results will include Lewis Carroll’s classic Through the Looking Glass as well as the titles Looking Glass Wars, Looking at Glass Through the Ages and Looking Through Grandmother’s Glasses.
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David John Moore Cornwell's books
David John Moore Cornwell's books include The Looking Glass War (1965), Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (1974), Smiley’s People (1979), The Little Drummer Girl (1983), The Night Manager (1993), The Tailor of Panama (1996), The Constant Gardener (2001), A Most Wanted Man (2008), and Our Kind of Traitor (2010), all of which have been adapted for film or television.
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a
The title is a reference to Lewis Carrol's 1871 work Through the Looking Glass
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Le Carré
Le Carré says that Le Carré wrote The Looking Glass War in large part because British readers had taken to The Spy Who Came in From the Cold too romantically, missing most of Le Carré's more acerbic criticism of British intelligence, so the follow-up has a more acute satirical bite, as does the film, which follows a rather absurd and dangerous scheme to send a recent émigré back into East Germany in pursuit of missile photographs.
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John le Carre's books
John le Carre's books also include The Looking Glass War (1965), (1979), The Little Drummer Girl (1983), The Night Manager (1993), The Tailor of Panama (1996), The Constant Gardener (2001), A Most Wanted Man (2008), and Our Kind of Traitor (2010), all of which have been adapted for film or television.
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the New York Times ,
Frank Beddor is the New York Times bestselling author of The Looking Glass Wars, Seeing Redd, and ArchEnemy, an adaptation or rather 'true telling' of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.
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by John le Carre, or David Cornwell
The title reads: The Looking Glass War by John le Carre, or David Cornwell if you know David Cornwell by David Cornwell's real name.
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Jorge Luis Borges
The Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges described the war as 'a fight between two bald men over a comb'.
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a strike against John le Carre's Cold War classic
And you should all know that the reference to The Looking Glass Wars is not a strike against John le Carre's Cold War classic.
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Edward Bulwer-Lytton
wars was first penned by English author Edward Bulwer-Lytton in 1839 for English author Edward Bulwer-Lytton's play Richelieu; Or the Conspiracy.
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as something of a departure for John le Carré following the breakout universal success of The Spy Who Came in from the Cold
Critics in 1965 saw The Looking Glass War as something of a departure for John le Carré following the breakout universal success of The Spy Who Came in from the Cold.
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and James Wood
Co-written by H.E. Clifton and James Wood, glass is notable for glass's preface by Wyndham Lewis, one of Wyndham Lewis's earliest pieces, in fact among Wyndham Lewis's first publications in a book.
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on a John Le Carre book
Jaeger's many film credits included The Looking Glass War (1969), based on a John Le Carre book and starring Anthony Hopkins, Henrik Ibsen in Song Of Norway (1970), The Seven Per Cent Solution (1976), Voyage Of The Damned (1976) and Nijinsky (1980).
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by H.E. Clifton
Co-written by H.E. Clifton and James Wood, glass is notable for glass's preface by Wyndham Lewis, one of Wyndham Lewis's earliest pieces, in fact among Wyndham Lewis's first publications in a book.
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by Nebula
Written by Nebula in collaboration with its director, the ill-fated Kenneth Anger associate Chris Arlington, Looking Glass was a mediation on the nature of fame and the perennial theme of the doppelgänger.
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the
Edgar Rice Burroughs ’s on record crediting those books as the inspiration for the Strategic Defended Initiative (aka Star Wars).
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O. Henry
O. Henry wove several stories together into this highly episodic narrative, taking O. Henry's title and inspiration from Lewis Carroll's ballad of the walrus and the carpenter in Through the Looking-Glass.
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