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Third Wish (2-Volume Boxed Set with CD) [Paperback]

Robert Fulghum
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (37 customer reviews)

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Book Description

February 1, 2009
In fairy tales, the third wish is the last one left when the first wish was foolish, and the second wish was used to undo the first wish. Now the remaining wish must be used wisely and well--with the help of co-conspirators. The main thread of Third Wish--like Ariadne’s string guiding Theseus into the labyrinth with the Minotaur--begins at a table on a terrace on the Greek Island of Crete, winds its way into the center and back out to the same table, passing through Greece, Japan, France, England, and Seattle. Its main characters are Alice, Max-Pol, Aleko, Wonko, Zenkichi, Polydora, Alice-Alice, and Dog. Woven into the fabric of the novel are cultural history, art, philosophy, archeology, poetry, theater and music. The mode of the novel is contained in the words Slowly, Surprise, and Witness. More than anything else, Third Wish is a long love story--not in the usual sense--but the story of people who love life and will go to great lengths to find a flourishing Way onward.

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Third Wish (2-Volume Boxed Set with CD) + Words I Wish I Wrote: A Collection of Writing That Inspired My Ideas + What on Earth Have I Done?: Stories, Observations, and Affirmations
Price for all three: $67.13

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Listen to the Music of Third Wish
Click on each track title listed below to listen to the MP3.
1. Cuckoo Not Song
2. Alex's March
3. The Jumwillies' Fight Song
4. Alice and Alex
5. Vasliev Ouranie
6. The Really Really Green Waltz
7. Wonko's Waltz
8. White Rabbit Suit
10. Waltzing The Bull
11. The Saddest Waltz
12. Waltz Of Strangers
13. Eros & Psyche
14. Three Wishes
15. Night Train To Barcelona
16. Jumwillies
17. The Queen of Queen Anne Hill
18. Sweet Sunday Morning
19. Left_Right Surprise A Cappella
20. Left_Right Surprise
21. Walk On



Amazon Vine Voices on Third Wish by Robert Fulghum

We asked customer reviewers participating in Amazon Vine to answer four questions about Robert Fulghum's Third Wish after reading an advance copy. We've included excerpts of reviewers' responses below to give readers an opportunity to learn more about the book (and get excited to read it themselves) before it releases in February 2009.

How would you describe Third Wish to a friend?

"Third Wish is like an erudite travelogue, filled with vivid descriptions of real places and things that an educated tourist would love to see, and well-traveled tourists will recognize."

"Third Wish is, above all, a journey. A journey of history, friendship, laughter, love, peace, sadness, and finally, understanding and acceptance."

"An odd and thought-provoking book that penetrates into the minds and lives of the characters in the book with simplicity and yet complexity."

"Third Wish may be classifiable as a novel, but it really isn't just a story. It is perhaps better to characterize it as a quest, or an expedition. The subject is humanity, human identity, and relationships. It isn't a psychological study, but is certainly a look at life. The characters meander through a series of events in a stream that permits easy excursions that form eddies and gentle whirlpools without disrupting their course."

It's a fictional, and metafictional, exploration of how one learns and understands one's life through interactions with others. It's about trust, and loss."

"This is an epic, sweeping story about several unique and unforgettable characters which is told in the past, the present, as fiction, fable, history, mythology, geography, culture, intrigue and romance. It is not an easy or a quick read. You don't and won't want to simply skim through paragraphs or descriptions because you really might miss something."

"Third Wish is a novel about falling in love, not with someone else, but with life itself. It's a story that takes place in various locations, with each location offering a distinctive backdrop to the narrative that adds to the emotional impact of the story. Although infused with philosophical concepts of impermanence and the nature of change, it's not preachy."

"I'd say it's a different kind of human story, not about love so much as what it means to be human, a story of three friends haunted by mystery. The reader becomes ravenous for the author to explain things, which he obliges, but slowly. Along the way are lessons in history, philosophy and religion, on art and Japanese tattoo that enrich the characters without slowing the story. It's a book of surprises."

"Third Wish is an epic story about a group of unusual characters who meet by accident, or hand of fate, and find strength in each other's company. The first part is a story within a story, with other smaller stories along the way."

Would you recommend Third Wish to a friend?

"I would definitely recommend this book to a friend!"

"I would recommend this book to my friends if they were of the intellectual type that would enjoy seeing into the minds and hearts of people and places."

"I have friends who really like to read slowly, to lose themselves, to think and ponder. Those friends would love it. I also think it might be a perfect book club book for a group who maybe wants to take a summer break, and read a longer book during that break."

"I think it would appeal to someone who has a sense of wanderlust. Not just because it starts off on a train, or that it involves characters who meet while traveling. But rather, those who enjoy the mystique of adventure, of traveling to new places where you sometimes feel on edge, or very aware of how foreign you are, those people would be perfectly suited to this book."

"Unequivocally, yes. Several of my friends have expressed impatience with the fashion for metafiction; I would ask them to refrain from classifying Third Wish in any particular way. Structurally, this book works extraordinarily well."

"I would only recommend Third Wish to friends who could fully appreciate the experience. This means only readers who are interested in myth, awakenings, riddles, and the variety of stories woven into one in this book."

"If someone likes allegories, riddles and personal stories that involve multiple cultures and various geographical settings with a historical backdrop, this is THE book to read."

Does Third Wish remind you of other books you've read? Which ones?

"Third Wish stands alone among the hundreds of books I have read. It is unique in many ways, and the level of intertwining of characters and stories is rare in my opinion."

"It does remind me of Catcher in the Rye, except Third Wish is much more in depth with regard to the thoughts, feelings, and interactions of the characters."

"I would say by comparison, if you joined Odysseus on his return to Ithaca, or followed Leopold on his walk about in Dublin, skipped down the yellow brick road with Dorothy, or followed a hare down a hole in your garden, Third Wish has a place in your life. Indeed, it may alter your view of it."

"It evokes strong feelings, which are associated with other books I've read, by Gerald Durrell, Graham Greene, Kenneth Grahame.... But Third Wish is sui generis."

"Third Wish reminds me of three, very different types of books: The first ones that came to mind and stayed with me throughout were the Griffin and Sabine trilogies. The next books that came to mind were by Gabriel Garcia Marquez. His books are certainly labyrinthine. And finally, Travels with Charlie: In Search of America, by Steinbeck.

"It reminds me of T.H. White's The Once and Future King, not because of story similarities, but rather on account of the way I felt when I was reading the book."

"I was really reminded of Will Durant's History of Civilization, especially of the volume on Greece. The genre is different obviously, but it had the same feel of moving from music, to architecture, to philosohy, to religion, etc. While obviously this is not a cultural history, the author managed to get a great deal of elements to it that touched on all these issues."

"Most assuredly, Atonement, as well as Don Quixote. The Alice books (Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass are frequently invoked in the story, and the heroine is named Alice) play a role, as does the work of Edward Lear."

"Some of the humor and word play reminds me of Tom Robbins. The geographical and historical parts remind me of James Michener."

Imagine you are at a bookstore reading for Third Wish. What would you like to ask the author? What would you like to tell him?

"I loved everything about your work. It was so unique, and it drew me completely in. Brilliant use of all five senses. I have to say if more books were written this way, and were this interesting, and different, I would definitely take the time to step out of my comfort zone and read books of other genres."

"As a story teller, you took me on a journey that I have really enjoyed. I think of visiting Crete one day, and enjoying the simple pleasures that Alex and Max-Pol experienced. I think of the many simple pleasures that in a busy world are forgotten."

"This book has touched me more deeply than any other work of creative imagination. (I won't say "work of fiction", because that understates the metafictional, poetical, and documentary aspects of the work.)"

"I am curious as to how long this book took to write. Was it based on journals, or was it created entirely from imagination? I'd like to know what the author envisions as his audience, as his perfect reader."

"Thank you, from the bottom of my heart. It's a wonderful book. And, in the spirit of All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten, I would encourage him to revisit Third Wish at some point, to add or change things without hesitation. It's a never-ending story."

"My only sadness was that I could not appreciate the CD of music as much as the books. The melodies are beautiful and even haunting, but I prefer a more fuller sound than just a violin or a guitar by themselves."

"The addition of music to the experience is like taking a reader's mind into a film setting without the help of actual video, so the reader must rely heavily on one's own imagination, it's wonderful!"

"I'd tell the author that I appreciated his love of lists and wordplay, but that I found it difficult--since this is no ordinary love story--to engage viscerally with the characters."


From the Author

A Letter from Robert Fulghum

Hello. Addressing the reader is an old tradition in literature, thoughRobert Fulghum currently out of fashion. But since I consider the relationship between a reader and a writer a personal one, I wish to revive the tradition. Moreover, this gesture is appropriate because, in the final part of Third Wish, a reader—a stakeholder now in the completion of the novel—addresses the author. This is as it should be. A successful novel must be a conspiracy between the writer and the reader—the creative imagination of both is required.

As with consulting a guidebook before travel, some access before beginning a critical review of a long novel may provide useful in the reading.

The bedrock of the story I will tell you is the 6,000 years of human history piled up in myth and fact on the Greek island of Crete. Since this is not common active knowledge, you may better appreciate my story and the actors onstage if you know the fundamentals of this history. Though I have sought clarity amidst complexity, previous readers tell me that having a few tools close by has been rewarding: an atlas, a dictionary, an encyclopedia, and even a short compendium of Greek myth and drama, for example.

There is a book within the novel: The Chronicles of Max-Pol Millay—a journal written for Alice-of-Many-Names to reveal the history and on-going affairs of Alexandros Evangelous Xenopouloudakis—(a.k.a. Alex Evans). This reflects real life experience—much of what we know about another comes mostly from what others tell us—and in the telling they both reveal and mask much about themselves.

The Crete and Oxford portions of the novel are illustrated, but not in the most direct sense—but by way of a sketchbook containing drawings, paintings, maps, and notes by a member of the cast—Louka Mahdis—expressing her own experiences as a gift to Max-Pol.

There is music in the novel—both written and recorded. Since this feature is somewhat unique, many early readers of the manuscript have not given the music much attention, alas, if any. But the music is very important. Every human being contains music in their mental jukebox. This music reveals primary history, fundamental character, and states of being. We choose it—sometimes it chooses us. Music commissioned for the novel is meant to express what words cannot. Please listen.

My category for myself is not writer or novelist but storyteller. Third Wish is a long story containing many short stories about those who enter the labyrinth of imagination and return. All of the main characters are themselves story-tellers—and they will tell you tales to answer questions you have not asked but only considered as you have experienced the unfolding of the play. However, in the end, it is the story told by the reader that matters most of all.

Four seminal notions define Third Wish: Slowly. Surprise. Witness. Passion.

Finally, when all is said and done, Third Wish is a wide-ranging love story of a specific kind: It’s about loving life and tying it up with a scarlet ribbon of memory as a keepsake. One of the characters says: "Love is not a noun, after all. Love is an active verb. Love is a chance we have taken – No wins, no losses – lots of ties." The nature of those ties binds the actors, the novel, the writer and, if all goes well, the reader together.

Robert Fulghum




Product Details

  • Paperback: 936 pages
  • Publisher: Becker & Mayer; First Edition edition (February 1, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1603800433
  • ISBN-13: 978-1603800433
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.5 x 5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 6 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (37 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #576,233 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Robert Fulghum is the bestselling author of "All I Really Need To Know I Learned in Kindergarten," "It Was On Fire When I Lay Down On It," "Uh-Oh," "Maybe (Maybe Not)," "From Beginning To End," "Words I Wish I Wrote," "True Love," and "What On Earth Have I Done?"

"Third Wish" is his first novel, published originally in Czech, Slovak, and Hungarian. He lives in Seattle, Washington and on the Greek island of Crete.

Customer Reviews

Reading this book, I got my wish the very first time... I was engaged from page one. Kizzie Jones  |  14 reviewers made a similar statement
It is unique in many ways, and the level of intertwining of characters and stories is rare in my opinion. Book Reviews Weekly  |  14 reviewers made a similar statement
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
38 of 45 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars Strangely interesting but it's not for me December 10, 2008
Format:Paperback|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
It took me a while to give this book a fair and considerate read. I have to admit that at first I really did not like it. I hated many of the character's names (and still do) and I had problems with the incomplete sentences and the unorthodox indentations. It can work when done correctly but I thought that the author was trying too hard to break the rules without having a reason to. Frankly, the whole book seemed pretentious and self-important. If it wasn't for the commitment that I made to truly review the book I would have given up on it half way through the first volume. However, as I stuck with it I began to be interested in some of the characters (I really liked India-What and cared about what she said). Still, I always felt like a lifelong carnivore sitting down to a gourmet vegan dinner. As good as it is I still crave butter and meat.

Third Wish has elements from several different books, the most obvious is Alice in Wonderland with it's nonsensical phrases and silly lines such as the Jumwillies or the unusual conversations. The Rabbit costumes and the rubber noses are just a few examples of the peculiar behavior of the characters in this book. Many of the conversations (O-K, most of them) where written in a style that I have never heard anyone use in real life. It could be that the author wished that people talked more like his characters than they do, I for one don't.

All of the attention to what I can only describe as "artifacts" (such as the unusual gifts that some of the characters send to each other) in the book really made me become more and more aware that this book is not written for someone like me, however I know of several people who would love it. Maybe someone who is into Deepak Chopra or other writers of new age spiritual thought would find this book deep and full of meaning. I am much too pragmatic for Third Wish, but it could possibly appeal to someone with more developed spiritual sensibilities than I. The author can cook, I just don't care for his type of food.
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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Third Wish is a Unique Experience December 11, 2008
Format:Paperback|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
Third Wish is a unique experience. The story is obviously a long one, but one that needs to have an audience. The accompanied music is very important to the story, as it shines a brighter light on the participating characters. I have thoroughly enjoyed the adventures of Max-Pol, Alex, Alice, Kostas and Wonko. The adventures of Dog and Alice-Alice were not as exciting to me, but of course I was missing my friends by the time we met. Since Third Wish is so unique to me, I really have nothing to compare it with, though I have read hundreds of books. Third Wish stands alone, not only as a story, but as an adventure. The adventure seems to be an external one, a record of trips and happenings. Along the way you realize that another adventure has already started in the readers mind. This journey is not into just the characters, but the world in which the characters exist. I had to remind myself that the adventures of the "Jumwillies" takes place in the present. The wonderful places and experiences they enjoy and share keep me thinking that they are living a thousand years ago. I yearned for the peaceful and fun trips they were having, as well as the silence that only a comfortable friend can provide during a visit. I would have enjoyed being a Jumwillie, sharing their laughter, stories, and emotions. I'm sure the Freudian experts would have a lot to say about the story within a story within a story. Of course, by doing so they would miss the entire point of Third Wish! For in the end, we are as readers only a witness.

Though we can share in the telling of the many stories that the novel reveals, we are reminded that we are not being witnessed ourselves. We are bound to the characters by their stories, but as we know, some secrets must not be told. Thus, we are left with only one truth...

Nobody knows what the Jumwillies know.

I would describe Third Wish as a journey into the intimate lives of characters that enjoy the simple pleasures that life can bring...though most of us do not see them. These characters however have conflicts and dilemmas along the way. Third Wish is, above all, a journey. A journey of history, friendship, laughter, love, peace, sadness, and finally understanding and acceptance.

Third Wish stands alone among the hundreds of books I have read. It is unique in many ways, and the level of intertwining of characters and stories is rare in my opinion.

To Mr. Fulghum, Thank you for the enlightenment, enjoyment, and your gift of many stories in Third Wish. I find myself thinking of taking a walk with a friend and playing my own version of left right surprise. I think of visiting Crete one day, and enjoying the simple pleasures that Alex and Max-Pol experienced. I think of the many simple pleasures that in a busy world are forgotten. The idea of retroactive wishes should not be taken lightly, and I hope to be reminded of them in the future.
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20 of 25 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Unlike most Novels you will ever read! December 10, 2008
Format:Paperback|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
Third Wish is a multi-genre reading and listening experience that operates and works on several different levels.

The book is a novel, and yet in reading it and listening to the accompanying music CD (original music by the way, tied specifically to points in the book) it also is a work that encompasses the culture, music, art, architecture and society of a Greek Island. Add to that, a very well written and introspective moving through the lives and relationships of the protagonists and you have a feast for the heart and intellect that is rarely seen in fictional literary works.

It may seem odd, but this reviewer found the experience more than a little reminiscent of the classical volumes of Will and Ariel Durant in some ways. See particularly The Story of Civilization, Vol II: The Life of Greece by Will Durant.

Of course those elements are not the primary focus, but the background information and research that went into this book represent a similar thoroughness and attention to detail that sets the tone and context of this work to a remarkable degree that I've never observed in a formal fictional genre.

Add to these elements, Fulgham's introspective and spiritual approach to the characters and relationships he builds upon and you have again, a very remarkable and unique book.

5 Stars. I recommend it heartily.

Bart Breen
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Wishes
Still reading but so far it is very enjoyable. I have not gotten around to listening to the music, I will. This book has a lot of concepts worth thinking about.
Published 2 months ago by Hornman25
3.0 out of 5 stars Missing CD
I ordered Robert Fulgham's soft covered book the "Third Wish." There is supposed to be a Music CD in the front jacket. It was there but there was no music on it. Nothing! Read more
Published 8 months ago by Mickey Dee
1.0 out of 5 stars Yawn
Yawn is an understatement - A long read into boredom - Fulghum's other shorter books are both more entertaining and meaningful
Published 21 months ago by Becky C. Grate
2.0 out of 5 stars Too heavy for my reading interests
I loved Fulghum's What on Earth have I done so I decided to order this. Just couldn't get into it.
Gave it to the local library.
Published 23 months ago by Kristi Gabriel
5.0 out of 5 stars Quite an Experience!
The Third Wish is a uniquely imaginative reading experience, unlike any other. Delving into this adult fairy tale is a mind-blowing experience, since it awakens brainwaves long... Read more
Published on October 23, 2010 by V. Marshall
5.0 out of 5 stars It' a long story, but not for another time!
The boxed and weighty, two volume set of "Third Wish" by Robert Folghum fills out some of the short stories told in his book, "What on Earth Have I Done? Read more
Published on September 30, 2010 by A. Dix
5.0 out of 5 stars WORTH PURCHASING
... VERY WELL WRITTEN, INTERESTING DESCRIPTIONS OF CHARACTERS & PLACES... FACTUAL INFORMATION WITH FICTIONAL STORY, UNEXPECTED TWISTS. BEAUTIFULLY PRESENTED. Read more
Published on August 29, 2010 by SUNSHINE
5.0 out of 5 stars great reading
Have always liked Robert Fulghum--I have all his books--although long, this, his firt novel, is very good--I find it hard to put down!!!
Published on August 28, 2010 by irish
5.0 out of 5 stars Multi-Faceted
Like all creations by Fulghum, this book is like a box of touchstones and evocations. I love it so far & promise to complete the experience, as soon as I complete my own novel. Read more
Published on June 20, 2010 by Roberta F. Gordon
5.0 out of 5 stars FANTASTIC!
All I gotta say is that if you are a thinker and wish to be impressed, then this is the way to go. Attention grabbing, interesting, and deeper than the normal boring world you may... Read more
Published on May 21, 2010 by Mykella
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