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Dorothy the Darker Side of Oz [Paperback]

Scott Stanford (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


Out of Print--Limited Availability.


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Paperback, May 1, 2010 --  

Book Description

May 1, 2010
As Dorothy awakes in Oz there's no sunshine in Munchkin country, just a twisted race enslaved by the Eastern witch, and a crooked path of yellow bricks she has to take to the mysterious Emerald City, a place ridden with sinister secrets. To get home the orphan girl treks the magical land, sometimes beautiful though often deadly, seeking help from the great wizard of Oz. The young girl struggles through a vast land of new sights, unfamiliar villages, and endures the dark forest, finding strange friends along her way. Cautiously trusting a peculiar scarecrow, he accompanies Dorothy through Oz, finding a tragic tin-man on their travels, and the cowardly lion; a victim to Mr Jack's infernal carnival. The animal's only hope is to be saved by Dorothy and her friends, but the ringleader and his obscure show have other plans for them. Dorothy's enchanting journey takes her through new, peculiar and amazing countries as Oz unveils itself. The strange friends must fight to overcome the rivers of mist, the deadly poppy fields, and beyond; whilst Kalidahs, Hammerheads and other macabre creatures stand in their way...and if they reach the Emerald City, they my find more than they bargained for. To get back to Kansas the young girl must survive the dangers of Oz, find the mysterious great wizard, and most of all, avoid the dead-lands of the West, where the evil witch Outika breeds her carnivorous pets, and watches the strange friends' every move. This isn't the Oz you know, and Dorothy may never leave.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 220 pages
  • Publisher: FastPrint (May 1, 2010)
  • ISBN-10: 1844267989
  • ISBN-13: 978-1844267989
  • Product Dimensions: 7.8 x 5.2 x 0.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (1 customer review)
 
 
 
 
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Decidely Dark and Morbid Version of the Classic Tale, January 4, 2012
L. Frank Baum's The Wonderful Wizard of Oz is a classic, and it takes some gumption to retell the story from another perspective. Using a different media is common. The movie, of course, was a great success. Slightly less so was The Whiz, but Wicked has gotten decent acclaim. To write a book, though, well, that takes big ones.

Scott Stanford's take on Oz is decidedly darker and macabre. There are no happy munchkins, no happy inhabitants of the Emerald City. The yellow-brick road is a broken down, crumbling path running over primordial black ooze which threatens to overtake it.

Dorothy herself, just turned 18, is a veteran of the foster care system, someone abused by a long line of perverted and cruel "fake fathers." She is transported to Oz, but not the same Oz as in the original book. Captured by the Witch of the East and her evil munchkin hybrids, Dorothy faces horrific scarring as the witch does not want there to be anyone prettier than her in Oz, but accidently-on-purpose, Dorothy manages to kill the witch and take her silver boots.

Dorothy embarks on her journey to see the wizard in order to go home, and on the way, she meets most of the expected characters and some new ones. Danger and death surround her. Along with the Tinman and the Lion, she takes an active part in killing herself (the Scarecrow is truly mindless in this version, unable to kill anyone or anything.)

What works about this book is that enough of the storyline remains true to the original to keep in context, but each event, character, and incident has enough differences to grab the readers' attention. And those differences are deliciously dark.

The author writes in a somewhat stilted and unique third person present narrative mode. While this may be to further distance the narrative from Baum's original, I felt if also distanced me, as a reader, from Dorothy's journey. He also chose to use italics to set off quotes, sometimes jumbling quotes from more than one speaker in a single paragraph. This broke into the flow of reading as that caused a break while quotes were sorted and attributed to the proper character.

This book is a decidedly edgy and morbid take on the classic original. If could have failed horribly. But it didn't. I works quite well, and I recommend it to those who enjoy the darker side of life.

The author's bio states that this is his fourth novel. I have not been able to find any of the others listed for sale, but I would be interested in reading more of his work. His decidedly different view on things makes him stand out from the pack.
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