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c.
1995, HarperCollins Publishers
ISBN 0-06-039144-8
This
novel presents a disturbing and provocative view of Oz from the
Wicked Witch of the West's perspective. Finally deemed worthy of
a name, readers follow the life of Elphaba as she grows from a neglected
infant to a much misunderstood woman murdered by a cold mercenary
from Kansas. Author Gregory Maguire paints a bleak, cynical picture
of Oz filled with secret police, racism, oppression, sadism and
more. This isn't the fairy tale from your childhood...
Overall
the book is thought provoking and extremely rich in language and
imagery. It's a treat to read. The exploration of morality is compelling
and the conflict between good versus evil is reduced almost to a
debate between semantics. In some ways it's possible to compare
Wicked to Lolita in the way the evil of the central
character is humanized.
Not
so much bound together by a story, the book explores a darker side
of Oz by outlining its history. Expect the book to offer a wealth
of ideas and images rather than a page-turning plot. In many ways,
the novel is poetic in nature.
I
enjoyed it thoroughly and recommend it. Oz is less enjoyable now
that I am an adult and the debate Maguire raises in Wicked
is more compelling, in some ways, than the black-and-white morally
clear world Baum painted for my childhood.
--
Scott Love
September, 1997
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