The Wonderful Wizard of OZ by Grace Frank Baum, W. W. Denslow (Illustrator)

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(Paperback - Special Value)

  • Publisher: Dover Publications
  • Pub. Date: May 1996
  • ISBN-13: 9780486291161
  • Sales Rank: 13,052
  • Age Range: 12 and up
  • 128pp
  • Series: Oz Series
  • Edition Description: Special Value
 
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Synopsis

Beautiful, rich, and vibrant illustrations accompany this classic tales and makes it a treasures for all to read

Annotation

After a cyclone transports her to the land of Oz, Dorothy must seek out the great wizard in order to return to Kansas.

New York Times Book Review

A revelation. As rich in emotion as they are in detail.

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Biography

Susan Wolstenholme is Professor of English at Cayuga Community College, Auburn, NY. She is the author of Gothic (Re)Visions: Writing Women as Readers (SUNY Press, 1993) and essays on American literature.

Customer Reviews

Allegory Makes for a Good Storyby Anonymous

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January 19, 2007: I have always loved the Wizard of Oz, it was probably the first live action film I ever saw and has greatly affected my life, fostering my love of musicals into something more than Disney ever could. I thought it was the greatest thing ever. Then I read the book when I was seven, I had just discovered it in my Grandfather's attic, and I decided that the book was by far superior. The story was longer, there was backstory, and it didn't have the weak, 'It was all a dream' ending, which I had always found disappointing. My love of the book was reaffirmed last year in my U. S. History class when the allegory of the novel was discussed in a featured essay, relating it to the argument between the gold and silver standard of the late 1800s. I highly recommend this book to anyone, but especially children with imaginations that need space to grow.

the movie is betterby Anonymous

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October 18, 2006: The Wizard of OZ by L. Frank Baum was different from the movie. It started out with the main character Dorothy in Kansas. Dorothy lived with her Uncle Henry, her Aunt Em, and her dog Toto. One day in Kansas, a cyclone hit Dorothy?s house while she was in it. So the cyclone took to another land called ?Land of Munchkins?. Well when she got up from her bed she thought everything was alright, until she walked out she saw a whole different land. Dorothy and Toto met a couple of the munchkins. They were a little afraid at once, but then they didn?t really seem too afraid anymore. Out of nowhere a witch appears. It was the Witch of the North. The good witch. The munchkins notice that Dorothy?s house landed on the Wicked Witch of the West. The witch?s feet were hanging out from under the house. The Witch of the North told her to take the silver slippers off of her feet. Dorothy asks the Witch of the North, how she would get out of there. Witch of the North said, ?If you follow the yellow brick road, you?ll find Emerald City. That?s where The Great OZ lives. He can help you to go back to Kansas? (Baum 15). On her way to Emerald City, she meets several interesting characters. They are the Scarecrow, the Tin Man and the Lion. The Scarecrow she found hanging from a pole in the middle of the corn field. The Tin Man was rusted in the forest so he could not move. The Lion was in the forest and he tried to eat Toto. When Dorothy tried to save Toto, she found out the lion was afraid. They all decided to go with Dorothy to Oz. The Scarecrow wanted a brain. The Tin Man wanted a heart and the Lion wanted courage. Dorothy wanted the Wizard of Oz to send her back to Kansas. The book is about their journey to Oz and the people and characters they met. The Wicked Witch of the West spends her whole time trying to attack Dorothy, Scarecrow, Cowardly Lion, and Tin Man. At one point the Bad Witch abducted Dorothy from her friends and was taken prisoner at her castle. She couldn?t hurt Dorothy because she was wearing the silver slippers. Eventually they defeated the Wicked Witch of the West by pouring water on her. This is where the book in the movie takes different turns. The movie ended after they defeated the witch and went to OZ to show him proof of killing the evil witch. The book has a different ending and adds another witch. She?s Glenda the South Witch. The readers of the book should look forward too the rest of the book. I like the movie better than the book because it wasn?t gruesome and the story was more focused. I recommend the book to people in the above PG age rating levels because some of the background stories are a little gross.


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