3.5 ⭐.
I've often asked myself what happens after the end of a movie? What happened after the end of Pretty Woman or Shawshank Redemption or other notable movies? It's probably why so many movies end up with sequels.
If we were to believe the ending of the movie The Wizard of Oz, Dorothy wakes up in her bed, she recounts to her friends and family an unbelievable story, and they all smile and laugh and tell her she has had a bump on her head and she has been dreaming. But in this book, After Oz, that is not how it ends in Kansas at all!
For four days after a twister hit Henry and Emily Gale's house and farm in Sunbonnet, Kansas in 1896, their 11-year-old niece, Dorothy, cannot be found. When she finally appears in a neighbor's pumpkin patch she tells a fantasy-like tale of having visited a place called Oz. She recalls her visit to a land that had yellow brick roads, an emerald city, flying monkeys, good and bad witches, a wizard, a talking scarecrow, lion, and tin man. But it's when she insists to everyone that she killed a witch by melting her that she is diagnosed to be having hallucinations.
However, when the sheriff and others find the body of the town's mean-spirited reclusive spinster in her house with her face burned off from lye, then everyone begins pointing their fingers at Dorothy Gale for murder. To the God-fearing community of Sunbonnet, Dorothy's story reeks of "blasphemy, paganism, and sacrilege". Poor Dorothy is said to not be having a delusion, but that she has invented her wild story to cover her crime! After a mock trial, the well-meaning reverend, sheriff, town doctor, and mayor decide that it would be in the best interest of the town and Dorothy to have her committed to the Topeka Insane Asylum.
Part of the narrative is told from the point of view of the collective "we" of the town of Sunbonnet and part is told from the viewpoint of Dr. Evelyn Grace Wilford, a psychologist from Bellevue Psychiatric Hospital in New York, who arrives in Sunbonnet to do research, and instead becomes embroiled in a murder case. Dr. Wilford shares with us her conversations with Dorothy Gale and her own correspondence letters to her psychiatric mentor, Dr. James.
When Dorothy is institutionalized, Dr. Wilford believes there has been a miscarriage of justice and she begins the search to solve the mystery of who killed Miss Avila Clough in Sunbonnet. What she uncovers is a multitude of secrets, lies, hatred, and bigotry. The mystery and how Dr. Wilford solves it is the real focus of this book and Dorothy takes on only a small role. I would have liked to hear more from Dorothy's character.
Even though this story was entertaining and had a very interesting premise, including a cameo appearance by Frank Baum, the author of The Wizard of Oz, I think I'll stick with the movie ending instead. I liked this story; I just didn't love it.