“Twas brillig, and the slithy toves / Did gyre and gimble in the wabe”. Nonsense? Children’s poems? Logic? Hidden meanings? Acrostics?
All of them, of course, when we’re talking about Lewis Carroll and his genial poetry.
In this new annoteBook by Dathlon a unique and precious collection of all the most significant poems written by the Rev. Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, Oxford Mathematics Lecturer in the real life, but also one of the most brilliant authors of english literature.
Included:
• All the verses from “Alices Adventures in Wonderland”, “Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There” and “Sylvie and Bruno”
• Phantasmagoria
• The Hunting of the Snark
• The Three Sunsets
• Acrostics
and many other poems.
With annoteBook by Dathlon you can make annotations to the poem’s verses in a simple and intuitive way, by swiping the verse you are interested in. The side notes are immediately recognized and can be read with a tap. Moreover, the table of content and a powerful search engine can be used to quickly found any verse.
New in this series: You can mark your preferred poems as “favorites”, to find them immediately in the collection.
Unique in its features:
• Index of poems
• Notes can be written for each verse
• Automatic bookmark: by reopening the application you will be automatically repositioned where you left the reading
• Customizable index by adding favorite poems
• Powerful search engine by words
• Easy reading with a choice of font sizes
• Landscape reading with big font
• Choice of background page color for reading under different light conditions
• "Poem of the Day": a random poem from the collection
An internet connection is not required.
New features in the next version.
Available annoteBooks by Dathlon:
Dante: Divine Comedy (in English and Italian)
Omero: Odissea (in Italian)
Omero: Iliade (in Italian)
Virgilio: Eneide (in Italian)
Ariosto: Orlando Furioso (in Italian)
Tasso: Gerusalemme Liberata (in Italian)
Leopardi: Canti (in Italian)
Foscolo: Tutte le poesie (in Italian)
Tassoni: La Secchia Rapita (in Italian)
D’Annunzio: Laudi (in Italian)
Carducci: Opere (in Italian)