The complete eBook collection of the New York Times bestselling The Wicked Years series by Gregory Maguire, including Wicked, Son of a Witch, A Lion Among Men, and Out of Oz.
Gregory Maguire is an American author, whose novels are revisionist retellings of children's stories (such as L. Frank Baum's The Wonderful Wizard of Oz into Wicked). He received his Ph.D. in English and American Literature from Tufts University, and his B.A. from the State University of New York at Albany. He was a professor and co-director at the Simmons College Center for the Study of Children's Literature from 1979-1985. In 1987 he co-founded Children's Literature New England (a non-profit educational charity).
Maguire has served as artist-in-residence at the Blue Mountain Center, the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, and the Hambidge Center. He lives in Concord, Massachusetts.
Rereading this series as it’s been sixteen years and I needed the refresh lol. This follows the story of Elphaba, an intersex green child who is considered a beast. Her parents are horrified and as they both continue in affairs, a sister and brother come after her before Elphaba attends Shiz University and meets Galinda, Boq, and Fiyero as they navigate right and wrong. Years later, Elphaba tries to find her purpose in revolution, silence, penance, forgiveness, and revenge…
Reasons I Recommend:
1) A dark telling of Oz before Dorothy
2) Revolution, racism, sexism, violence, war, and magic and
3),Understand that the play is very different from the world Maguire writes.
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Quote 1: “Ask me no questions and I’ll spell you no lies,”
Quote 2: “Fiyero, you disaffected fool, the tragedy is all around us. Worrying about anything smaller is a distraction. Any casualty of the struggle is their fault, not ours. We don’t embrace violence but we don’t deny its existence-how can we deny it when its effects are all around us?
Quote 3:“The real thing about evil isn’t any of what you said. You figure out one side of it— the human side, say — and the eternal side goes into shadow. Or vice versa. It’s like the old saw: What does a dragon in its shell look like? Well no one can ever tell, for as soon as you break the shell to see, the dragon is no longer in its shell. The real disaster of this inquiry is that it is the nature of evil to be secret.”
Part of the Wicked collection but it was fun to go back and reread the original story. It’s been decades since I did and seeing Dorothy arrive by cyclone, killing the Wicked Witch of the East and getting her silver shoes before embarking on a trip to meet the wizard was so fun. After rereading Wicked, you really see how Maguire emphasized the world giving Boq a larger backstory, more history of the kingdoms and realms Dorothy travels through and more.
Reasons I Recommended:
1) My mom’s favourite movie so it always held a special place in my heart
2) How the movie was adapted, the darker elements left out, and which parts were enriched and
3) How the adventure of Dorothy can be seen as a blip in the war the Wizard brought to Oz after reading Wicked.
Reread. Tells the story of Liir, the son of Elphaba and Fiyero who doesn’t really know his own parentage. With Elphaba’s broom, he attempts to find his half-sister Nor, falling from the sky and being rescued and nursed back to health by Candle. When he once again embarks on hi journey, he tries to find purpose and finds love with a fellow soldier…
Reasons I Recommend:
1) Ending bringing everything full circle
2) Trism & Liir’s connection and
3) Liir’s constant battle with right and wrong and what he knows to what he thinks.
Reread. We get to see how the story of the lion crossed over between Elphaba’s time at Shiz and continued with Dorothy and beyond. How he became cowardly and beyond and how Yackle’s story and her prophecy followed the Thropp family…
Reasons I Recommend:
1)If you already love the Wicked universe, it delves into deeper detail
2) Tells more about who Liir is and his search for Nor and
3) The lion trying to find his place in an ever changing world.
Reread. The final chapter in the Wicked series brings Dorothy back to Oz, reunites Liir and Trism, and has Rain and Glinda working to discover truths about Oz, about Elphaba, and about the Grimmerie.
Reasons I Recommend:
1) Wraps up the world well with Elphaba’s granddaughter
2) Answers questions from the first and
3) Brings the story full circle.
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Quote: “I leave the front door unlocked for one of them and the back door unlocked for the other.They know where I am. I’ve cherished them both, Rain, and I do still. Whoever they are. I love both Trism and Candle. It isn’t impossible for you to love both Tip and Ozma.” “What’s impossible,” she said, “is to know the truth inside someone else’s heart if they don’t tell you.” He agreed with that. “Well, I love you. Just in case you ever wondered. And don’t forget that I’ve spent some brief time of my life as an Elephant. They say Elephants never forget, and as I live and breathe, I’m telling you that this is true of humans no less than Ele-phants. Now, listen. I’m being serious, my desperate sweetheart. What about if a message arrives for you?Where shall I say you’ve gone?” She threw an arm about airily. “Oh, way up high. Over the rainbow somewhere, I guess.”
I discovered this series years ago after seeing the musical Wicked. I think I actually stopped at the bookstore on the way home from the theater, so I preface this by saying that I was already bias. I thoroughly enjoyed the first book that followed the life of The Wicked Witch aka Elphaba from birth thru the events that were recounted in The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by L. Frank Baum. The second and third book were not quite as gripping but were a nice follow up. The second was about the witch's son, Liir and how he grew up after the end of Wicked and the third followed the lion, Brr, and the dispensation of a prophesy of Sister Yackle. The fourth book closes out the series nicely wrapping up loose ends with Dorothy, Brrr, Liir, and Liir's daughter Rain all featuring prominently in an adventure tale. It is not always a fast moving adventure, but then time moves at its own speed in Oz. The author does a fine job of paying tribute to Baum's original stories (there are some references that go beyond the first book in the Oz series) and even incorporating snippets from the 1939 movie. I wholeheartedly recommend at least the first book to any adult who wants a slightly slant on a favorite children's story.
Good series! This was a bit outside my normal reading bubble but I have this thing where I have to read the book before watching the movie. The broadway Wicked is a very tamed down more or less inspired version of these novels. His writing is quite dark compared to the Hollywood take on Wicked. This wasn’t an easy, quick read by any means but I don’t have any regrets sitting down with this series. I find the author’s ability to take a story like the wizard of oz and completely spin off a whole other series is pretty neat!
The series is fine—interesting enough that I wanted to see how it all played out, but not a favorite. I didn’t feel that “can’t-put-it-down” pull that I get from most books I really love. The world-building is unique, and the take on Oz is clever, but I often found myself passively listening or reading rather than fully engaged.
I did really enjoy hearing the author narrate Book 2—his voice and rhythm matched the tone of the story well. The other narrator just didn’t work for me and made it harder to stay connected.
Honestly, I feel like it went in too many directions, had way too many things left unanswered. This is one of the few times, I feel like the media version(movie/play) of a story is the better version. I knew going in they were very different but the unanswered questions truly annoyed me. I gave it 2 stars since there were times when it peaked my interest but often fell flat.
god this series put me in such a reading slump; it definitely reads like a series that was continued due to the popularity it garnered from the musical. to be clear, i thought the commentary was thoughtful if not particularly interesting and the first one is the best by far. loved the lgbtia+ and polyamorous representation
Gregory Maguire is my favorite fiction author. I have spent untold hours reading the Wicked Years Series. I would highly recommend it to anyone. His brand of storytelling is unique, imaginative, and thought-provoking.
These books give you a look at OZ in a new and darker light. In wicked it’s about Elphaba and how she meet Glinda. At first they are friends but the truth of Oz changes things between them. These are more political. But you see the characters in a new light and better understand them.
So very different from the theatrical production. This book is for adults. Otherwise, it's a very interesting book. It can be a challenge to read as a lot is left for the reader to figure out, mostly the motivation of the characters. You don't get much in what they are thinking, so you have to work out why they say and do what you read. It can be slow at times as it is character driven and not action driven. I'm glad to be reading it.
A well-crafted story, at times told to unwarranted length. The first book in the volume (Wicked) was quite compelling as was the second (Son of A Witch). The third and fourth (A Lion Among Men and Out of Oz) dragged a bit in the middle but got better at the end.