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A Lion Among Men Hardcover – October 14, 2008
- Print length312 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherWilliam Morrow
- Publication dateOctober 14, 2008
- Dimensions6.12 x 1.09 x 9.25 inches
- ISBN-109780060548926
- ISBN-13978-0060548926
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4 stars and above
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
"Hardly more than a kitten . . . I had thought to call it Prrr, but it shivers more often than it purrs, so I call it Brrr instead."
—From Wicked
Since Wicked was first published in 1995, millions of readers have discovered Gregory Maguire's fantastically encyclopedic Oz, a world filled with characters both familiar and new, darkly conceived and daringly reimagined. In the much-anticipated third volume of the Wicked Years, we return to Oz, seen now through the eyes of the Cowardly Lion—the once tiny cub defended by Elphaba in Wicked.
While civil war looms in Oz, a tetchy oracle named Yackle prepares for death. Before her final hour, an enigmatic figure known as Brrr—the Cowardly Lion—arrives searching for information about Elphaba Thropp, the Wicked Witch of the West. As payment, Yackle, who hovered on the sidelines of Elphaba's life, demands some answers of her own.
Brrr surrenders his story to the ailing maunt: Abandoned as a cub, his earliest memories are gluey hazes, and his path from infancy in the Great Gillikin Forest is no Yellow Brick Road. Seeking to redress an early mistake, he trudges through a swamp of ghosts, becomes implicated in a massacre of trolls, and falls in love with a forbidding Cat princess. In the wake of laws that oppress talking Animals, he avoids a jail sentence by agreeing to serve as a lackey to the war-mongering Emperor of Oz.
A Lion Among Men chronicles a battle of wits hastened by the Emerald City's approaching armies. What does the Lion know of the whereabouts of the Witch's boy, Liir? What can Yackle reveal about the auguries of the Clock of the Time Dragon? And what of the Grimmerie, the magic book that vanished as quickly as Elphaba? Is destiny ever arbitrary? Can those tarnished by infamy escape their sobriquets—cowardly, wicked, brainless, criminally earnest—to claim their own histories, to live honorably within their own skins before they're skinned alive?
At once a portrait of a would-be survivor and a panoramic glimpse of a world gone shrill with war fever, Gregory Maguire's new novel is written with the sympathy and power that have made his books contemporary classics.
About the AuthorGregory Maguire is the bestselling author of Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister, Lost, Mirror Mirror, and the Wicked Years series, which includes Wicked, Son of a Witch, and A Lion Among Men. Wicked, now a beloved classic, is the basis for the Tony Award-winning Broadway musical of the same name. Maguire has lectured on art, literature, and culture both at home and abroad. He lives with his family near Boston, Massachusetts.
A Letter from Gregory Maguire
Dear friends,
Here it is: volume three in my series coming to be known as The Wicked Years. I have had such warm reader response to Wicked and Son of a Witch, both initially and in the years since, that the thought of adding to the series made me feel--well, cowardly. I resisted for a while. But courage comes to those who wait, sometimes: so here is volume three.
A Lion Among Men follows the peripatetic career of the Cowardly Lion. First seen in Wicked as a lion cub culled from his pride for the purpose of laboratory experimentation, the Lion (known as Brrr) makes his name in that little Matter of Dorothy about which all of Oz is still talking. But one doesn’t necessarily become lion-hearted by going after public approval, by racking up those medals and titles and golden statuettes at award ceremonies.
Tarnished with scandal of every stripe, Brrr is loathed by the Animals who believe he betrayed them in helping Dorothy do in the Witch. He fares no better trying to live as a lion among men. When civil war breaks out in Oz, Brrr is caught in the line of fire as he interviews the mysterious old oracle, Yackle, about the sources of Elphaba’s power. He must choose how much approval he can live without. A bit player all his life, he may yet be the linchpin on which the prosecution of the war rests.
When I travel abroad (and the continuing success of the musical Wicked has brought me to countries where it is now playing), I am sometimes met with bemusement about the origins of the material--a children’s book made famous by a musical film for children!--how can this serve as a proper metaphor for a meditation about predestination and free will, about political opportunism and personal valor?
Maybe, I say, you have to be an American to see that a vaudeville comedian in baggy lion-pajamas, as Burt Lahr seemed to me, has just as much right to inspire a story about the education of a hero as any Siegfried or Lancelot or Joan of Arc.
And if they reply, You have some nerve!I answer Thank you. I hope so.
And I do thank you for your lion-hearted confidence in these wicked novels.
-- Gregory
From Publishers Weekly
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Booklist
Review
“Maguire’s work is melodic, symphonic and beautiful; it is dejected and biting and brave. . . . In fabulous details and self-mocking language, Maguire displays his gift for whimsical portrayals of the broken, the powerless, the hopeless, the bad.” — Los Angeles Times
“Much to savor, laugh at, and think about. . . . A page-turning fantasy and a timely political allegory.” — USA Today
“Entertaining....The author mixes some relatively weighty existential themes—the search for self, faith, redemption—into his whimsical story line. [A] darkly enchanting saga” — Publishers Weekly
“Engrossing...Maguire is a masterful storyteller with an uncanny flair for mixing political and personal while exploring what it means—and what it costs—to be accepted in a society.” — New York Daily News
“As usual, Maguire, a seasoned fabulist, populates his version of Oz with a cast of utterly fantastical characters who must face their own inner demons while tumult and uncertainty rages around them. An absolute must-read for fans of this ever-evolving dark fairy tale.” — Booklist
“This Oz goes far beyond L. Frank Baum’s; it’s as surreal as a dream, but as immaculately and impeccably detailed as history. Maguire’s wizardlike grasp over every aspect of this reinvented land rivals classic literary landscapes like Tolkien’s Middle Earth and Faulkner’s Yoknapatawpha County.” — Albany Times Union
“So well-crafted that readers of all ages could enjoy witnessing Brrrr’s transformation from an insecure kitten in the woods to a compassionate, engaged ‘manimal.’” — Christian Science Monitor
“The third book in Maguire’s Wicked Years is at once funny, charming, harrowing, bleak and incredibly beautiful.” — The American Chronicle
“The minute you open A Lion Among Men, you’re back in Maguire’s exquisitely detailed environment, caught up once again in his geography, his characters, his worldview, touched anew by the loneliness that lurks in the heart of all things.” — New Orleans Times-Picayune
From the Back Cover
"Hardly more than a kitten . . . I had thought to call it Prrr, but it shivers more often than it purrs, so I call it Brrr instead."
—From Wicked
Since Wicked was first published in 1995, millions of readers have discovered Gregory Maguire's fantastically encyclopedic Oz, a world filled with characters both familiar and new, darkly conceived and daringly reimagined. In the much-anticipated third volume of the Wicked Years, we return to Oz, seen now through the eyes of the Cowardly Lion—the once tiny cub defended by Elphaba in Wicked.
While civil war looms in Oz, a tetchy oracle named Yackle prepares for death. Before her final hour, an enigmatic figure known as Brrr—the Cowardly Lion—arrives searching for information about Elphaba Thropp, the Wicked Witch of the West. As payment, Yackle, who hovered on the sidelines of Elphaba's life, demands some answers of her own.
Brrr surrenders his story to the ailing maunt: Abandoned as a cub, his earliest memories are gluey hazes, and his path from infancy in the Great Gillikin Forest is no Yellow Brick Road. Seeking to redress an early mistake, he trudges through a swamp of ghosts, becomes implicated in a massacre of trolls, and falls in love with a forbidding Cat princess. In the wake of laws that oppress talking Animals, he avoids a jail sentence by agreeing to serve as a lackey to the war-mongering Emperor of Oz.
A Lion Among Men chronicles a battle of wits hastened by the Emerald City's approaching armies. What does the Lion know of the whereabouts of the Witch's boy, Liir? What can Yackle reveal about the auguries of the Clock of the Time Dragon? And what of the Grimmerie, the magic book that vanished as quickly as Elphaba? Is destiny ever arbitrary? Can those tarnished by infamy escape their sobriquets—cowardly, wicked, brainless, criminally earnest—to claim their own histories, to live honorably within their own skins before they're skinned alive?
At once a portrait of a would-be survivor and a panoramic glimpse of a world gone shrill with war fever, Gregory Maguire's new novel is written with the sympathy and power that have made his books contemporary classics.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
A Lion Among Men
Volume Three in the Wicked YearsBy Gregory MaguireHarperCollins Publishers, Inc.
Copyright © 2008 Gregory MaguireAll right reserved.
ISBN: 9780060548926
Chapter One
The time came for her to die, and she would not die; so perhaps she might waste away, they thought, and she did waste, but not away; and the time came for her to receive final absolution, so they set candles upon her clavicle, but this she would not allow. She blasphemed with gusto and she knocked the scented oils across the shroud they'd readied on a trestle nearby.
"God love her," they said, in bitter, unconvincing voices—or perhaps they meant May the Unnamed God love her, our unrepentant sister Yackle, for we certainly can't.
"Sink me in the crypt," she said, speaking directly to them for the first time in years. "You're too young to know; that's how they used to do it. When the time came for an elder to go and she wouldn't, they settled her down in the ossuary so she could chummy up to the bones. Supplied her with a couple of candles and a bottle of wine. Let her get used to the notion. They came back a year later to sweep up the leavings."
"Mercy," said whoever was nearby to hear.
"I insist," she replied. "Check with Sister Scholastica and she'll bear me out.""She's raving mad," said someone else, chocolately. Yackle approved of chocolate, and indeed, everything edible. Since Yackle's eyesight had gone out for good a decade earlier, she identified individuals by the degree and idiosyncracy of their halitosis.
"She's always been raving mad," said a third observer, Vinegarish Almonds. "Isn't that rather sweet?"
Yackle reached for something to throw, and all she could find was her other hand, which wouldn't detach.
"She's doing sign language." "The poor, deluded dovelette." "Clinging to life so—whatever for?" "Perhaps it isn't her time."
"It is," said Yackle, "it is, I keep telling you. Won't you fiends let me die? I want to go to hell in a handbasket. Put me out of my misery and into the Afterlife where I can do some real damage, damn it."
"She's not herself," said someone.
"She was never reliably herself, to hear tell," said another.
The bedsheets caught fire spontaneously. Yackle found she was rather enjoying this, but it helped neither her reputation nor her rescue that the only liquid nearby with which to douse the flames was cognac.
Still, Yackle was not to be dissuaded. "Isn't there a Superior in the House?" she asked. "Someone who can lay down the law?"
"The Superior Maunt died a decade ago," they replied. "We work by consensus now. We've noted your request to be interred alive. We'll put it on the agenda and take it up next week at Council."
"She'll burn the House down, and us with it," muttered a novice, sometime later. Yackle could tell that the innocent speaker was talking to herself, to stoke her courage.
"Come here, my duckie," said Yackle, grasping. "I smell a little peppermint girl nearby, and no garlicky matron hovering. Are you the sentry? On our own, are we? Come, sit nearer. Surely there is still a Sister Apothecaire in residence? With her cabinets of nostrums and beckums, tonics and tablets? She must possess a sealed jar, it would be dark blue glass, about yea-high, pasted over with a label picturing three sets of crossed tibias. Couldn't you find this and pour me out a fatal little decoction?"
"Not a spoonful of it, I en't the grace to do it," said Peppermint Girl. "Let go a me, you harpy. Let go or—or I'll bite you!"
Out of charity to the young, Yackle let go. It would do the poor girl no good to take a bite of old Yackle. The antidote en't been invented yet, and so on.
Hours and days pass at elastic rhythms for the blind. Whether the pattern of her naps and wakings followed the ordinary interruptions of daylight by nighttime, Yackle couldn't tell. But someone she recognized as Broccoli Breath eventually informed her that the sorority had decided to bow to Yackle's final wish. They would install her in the crypt among the remains of women long dead. She could approach bodily corruption at whatever speed appealed to her. Three candles, and as to nourishment, red or white?
"A beaker of gasoline and a match as a chaser," said Yackle, but she was indulging in a joke; she was that pleased. She nominated a saucy persimmon flaucande and a beeswax candle scented with limeberries—for the aroma, not for the light. She was beyond light now.
"Good voyage, Eldest Soul," they sang to her as they carried her down the stairs. Though she weighed no more than sugarbrittle she was awkward to move; she couldn't govern her own arms or legs. As if motivated by a spite independent of her own, her limbs would keep ratcheting out to jab into doorjambs. The procession lacked a fitting dignity.
"Don't come down for at least a year," she sang out, giddy as a lambkin. "Make that two. I might be old as sin itself, but once I start rotting it won't be pretty. If I hammer at the cellar door don't open it; I'm probably just collecting for some public charity in hell."
"Can we serenade you with an epithalamium, as you go to marry Death?" asked one of the bearers, tucking in the shroud to make it cozy.
"Save your doggy breath. Go, go, on to the rest of your lives, you lot. It's been a swell, mysterious mess of a life. Don't mind me. I'll blow the candles out before I lower my own lights."
A year later when a sister ventured into the crypt to prepare for another burial, she came across the hem of Yackle's shroud. She wept at the notion of death until Yackle sat up and said, "What, morning already? And I having those naughty dreams!" The maunt's tears turned to screams, and she fled upstairs to start immediately upon a long and lively career as an alcoholic.
Continues...
Excerpted from A Lion Among Menby Gregory Maguire Copyright © 2008 by Gregory Maguire. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
Product details
- ASIN : 0060548924
- Publisher : William Morrow; First Edition (October 14, 2008)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 312 pages
- ISBN-10 : 9780060548926
- ISBN-13 : 978-0060548926
- Item Weight : 1.25 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.12 x 1.09 x 9.25 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #96,269 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,158 in Folklore (Books)
- #4,800 in Epic Fantasy (Books)
- #6,702 in Literary Fiction (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Gregory Maguire is the bestselling author Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West. With its three sequels, Son of a Witch, A Lion Among Men, and Out of Oz, the quartet is known as the Wicked Years. It was followed up by a trilogy called Another Day (The Brides of Maracoor, The Oracle of Maracoor, and The Witch of Maracoor), which continues the saga begun in Wicked. These books have have earned him rave reviews and a dedicated following.
The Broadway musical based on Wicked is now the fourth longest running play in Broadway history. The play has inspired a two-film project being released in 2024 and 2025, starring Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande.
Maguire has written ten other adult novels and twenty children's novels. He received his doctorate in English Literature from Tufts University, and has taught at Simmons College and other Boston area colleges.
He has also served as an artist-in-residence at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum.
Having lived in Dublin and London, Maguire now makes his home in New England and in France with his husband, the painter Andy Newman, and several of their adopted children.
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Customers find the story compelling and interesting. They appreciate the artful style and great imagery. The book provides insights and makes you think in unexpected ways. Many consider it a good value for money. However, some feel the pacing is slow at times and tedious. Opinions differ on readability - some find it well-written and easy to read, while others find it wordy and less like a follow-on novel. There are mixed views on character development - some find them compelling and old characters brought back, while others say they're uncompelling.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the story compelling and interesting. They appreciate the flow of the story, character development, and unique perspective on events. The prose and storyline are intimate, sweeping, and pulse-pounding. There is an interesting side story about the dwarf, and the book expands on certain details and locations of Maguire's Oz.
"...and its prose and storyline is intimate, sweeping, pulse-pounding and lovely." Read more
"...this third volume of the Wicked Series and found that it satisfied a lot of my curiosity about some of the peripheral characters in the first two..." Read more
"...WICKED, it is certainly quite a great deal stronger and more compelling than SON OF A WITCH." Read more
"...That, to me, is enough to make this story compelling beyond belief...." Read more
Customers enjoy the book's art style. They find the imagery great and the characters wonderful. The book is described as mysterious yet artistic, a real page-turner with many twists and turns.
"...and its prose and storyline is intimate, sweeping, pulse-pounding and lovely." Read more
"...Gregory Maguire has done it again with his mysterious but artful style...." Read more
"...and worth it to be properly set-up to read Out of Oz, which is a beautiful and aching book, much like the original Wicked." Read more
"...Listed as Like New...it looks New!" Read more
Customers find the book offers insights into the original story that make them think and see things from an unexpected perspective. It brings up philosophical questions and engages their attention. Readers say it enhances Baum's universe and concept of reality, making it a great read.
"...So much is said in just a few words. It’s soul rending, mind boggling...." Read more
"This is a series of books that you need to read. It brings up a lot of philosophical questions in ways that truly makes you think and see things..." Read more
"...He has greatly enhanced the universe originated by Baum s earlier works." Read more
"...It has a few parts that are interesting to read, and offers a new point of view on events already shown on previous two books" Read more
Customers appreciate the book's value for money. They say it's a good price, but some think it's not new.
"This is a kindle book purchase...." Read more
"I bought this because it was at a good price and I wanted to know what happened after 'Wicked'...." Read more
"...I was pleased that the price was decent and I was able to add this to my collection." Read more
"Good price...." Read more
Customers have different views on the book's readability. Some find it well-written and easy to understand, praising the author's skillful writing style and impressive vocabulary. Others feel the language is too wordy and cumbersome, with obscure words that detract from the plot.
"The book was damaged and bad writing on/in it and there was no dust jacket as advertised." Read more
"...It's beautifully written..." Read more
"...-Similar to the two previous books, nothing is really resolved in this book. Any answers we do get tend to create more questions...." Read more
"...MAJOR CON: the author seems to go out of his way to use HUNDREDS of completely obscure words which deprive the reader of the meaning of the..." Read more
Customers have different views on the character development. Some find the characters compelling and appreciate the return of old ones. Others feel the characters lack depth and personality, with some finding them unlikable and lacking redeeming qualities.
"...Better character development, flow of story." Read more
"...-Brrr, the Cowardly Lion, is not a likeable character, much like Liir and Elphaba...." Read more
"...vast world that Maguire has built, it is interesting to read the point of view of other characters, but I am unconvinced that the Lion (Brr) was the..." Read more
"...The ongoing story is interesting, but it leaps wildly from character to character, from time to time, from place to place, and fails to tie it all..." Read more
Customers find the book's pacing slow at times. They feel it takes too long to make its point and the first half of the novel moves rather slowly. The journey is described as dull and tedious, like a Gump-esque journey that drags on forever. Some readers feel the book is not a light read and feels like filler.
"...The book is slow-paced without any satisfying payoff. Now onto "Out of Oz" (book 4) where hopefully we'll get some answers..." Read more
"...While the book is slow at times, the ending is pretty great as we finally get some answers to long time lingering mysteries...." Read more
"...It was a little slow at first but then it took off. It was a total new way to look at the fairy tale land of OZ...." Read more
"...An interesting story, in a cerebral way, and worth it to be properly set-up to read Out of Oz, which is a beautiful and aching book, much like the..." Read more
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Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on August 24, 2022All three of the Oz books I've read by the author have been PHENOMENAL; this particular book was the only one (so far) which caused me, in some passages, to laugh -- to LAUGH OUT LOUD! I laughed so heartily while reading a few particular passages (or a line) that I dropped my Amazon Fire! This book contains all of the elements which made the first three of the books I've read in this series instant classics; it's the only one, however, which made me guffaw at times! It's beautifully written (although, as with the first two books, it's better to read this on an e-reading device with a built-in dictionary, as -- at least with me -- the book's vocabulary can be challenging), and its prose and storyline is intimate, sweeping, pulse-pounding and lovely.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 15, 2010I really enjoyed "A Lion Among Men", and felt it an apt title for Mr. Maguire's story of Brrr, the "cowardly" lion, who, due to happenstance, never seems to be able to find his place in this world.
I thoroughly enjoyed this third volume of the Wicked Series and found that it satisfied a lot of my curiosity about some of the peripheral characters in the first two volumes. I am absolutely looking forward to volume 4 of this series, as I am sure Mr. Maguire will continue taking us along the path of the characters he has so cleverly taken to new depths through his expansion of Oz.
Maguire's style is such that you really can never put his books down, "A Lion Among Men" included, and when you finish one of his titles, you are still hungry for more.
I find that the development of Brrr's character through his somewhat doleful life experiences makes a lot of sense and I also enjoyed the depth that was given to the character Yackle, whom I've been curious about since she appeared in Volume I.
If you enjoy the Wicked Series, this is a must read!
- Reviewed in the United States on October 17, 2008L. Frank Baum was absolutely fascinated by (and exemplary of) Yankee ingenuity, and that's part of what made Gregory Maguire such a perfect heir to Baum in WICKED, his 1995 dark revisioning of THE WONDERFUL WIZARD OF OZ. One of the greatest pleasures of Maguire's novel was to see how Baum's fantasy world of Oz might look from a more sober adult perspective, and though Maguire's own fantasy of what Oz might be ultimately superseded Baum's (which is appropriate, given that both books are about repeated regime changes), Maguire's dystopic fantasy was aided mightily by the efficient clockwork of Baum's plot acting as a motor propelling the events along. You knew that Elphaba would have to wind up in the Vinkus (or "Winkie Country") as the Wicked Witch of the West, and that Dorothy would come along eventually with that fateful bucket of water. (That Dorothy should show up to be merely a remorseful pawn in the extended games of manipulation waged among Elphaba, the Lady Glinda, and the Wizard was not only Maguire's grandest irony but one of the most satisfying parts of his book.) Maguire's first sequel, SON OF A WITCH, suffered greatly from the removal of this Baumian framework. The masterplot of this later work seemed based on the George W. Bush administration rather than anything dreamed up by L. Frank Baum (with Tip, Mombi, and the four-horned cow making only the briefest of appearances to remind us of Baum's own sequel to his first oz novel). Maguire's vision of sexual couplings hidden against a background of oppression and political upheaval seemed a bit adrift and unfocused, and few of the mysteries raised in Maguire's first book received any answer.
This new sequel, A LION AMONG MEN, finds Maguire on much firmer ground: we're much more firmly rooted in Baum's fantasyland, with the Cowardly Lion (glimpsed only briefly in WICKED) now taking center stage, aided by the Glass Cat, that Baumian character introduced in THE PATCHWORK GIRL OF OZ whose lazy snarkiness made it an absolute natural for inclusion in Maguire's books. Dispatched to interview Yackle, the mysterious old woman who kept appearing at different intervals in Elphaba's life, the Cowardly Lion finds her in the Cloister of St. Glinda not far from the Emerald City, and here we find answers to many of the mysteries from the first book in "The Wicked Years" series: who Yackle is, what happened to Elphaba's Grimmerie, what the inhabitants of the mysterious land of the Glikkus nestled in a far corner of Maguire's Oz are like, and (at last!) what the purpose is of the terrifying Clock of the Time Dragon that haunted the opening sections of WICKED. (We also find out why the Cowardly Lion acquired his adjectival descriptor.) Much is left open, such as the fates of Liir, the true Scarecrow, and (most maddeningly) the missing Ozma, and it's hard to see from how Maguire ends this book as to how the events of THE MAGICAL LAND OF OZ, however distorted, might later come to pass (or even how the Glass Cat will end up eventually at the home of Dr. Pipt). Equally frustrating is the fact that so much of this sequel's action is circumscribed in the Cloister and hemmed in by the Ozian civil wars started since the first book in the series. But even if this work is not quite up to the standards of WICKED, it is certainly quite a great deal stronger and more compelling than SON OF A WITCH.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 1, 2012If you were as excited by the style and language as much as the story of the first two installments of the series, "A Lion Among Men" will be another delightful read for you. Clearly, this volume in Maguire's "Wicked" series deals with the Cowardly Lion, Brrrr. As with the previous books, Maguire suffuses his characters with life and meaning that runs against what appears to be his natural inclination for glibness. As the book progresses, many of the questions that "Wicked" and "Son of a Witch" present are answered and moved forward to the next step.
Maguire's language is as enjoyable and fluid as ever, though it feels as though his characters are increasingly more likely to use modern colloquialisms as the series goes on. In every instance, the linguistic anachronisms cause the eye to catch just a little bit longer on the words than necessary. This is most pronounced with Dorothy's dialog, of which there's perhaps more than in any of the other books.
Misplaced colloquialisms aside, I loved this book. For me, Maguire's writing falls in that same space as is occupied by Neil Gaiman and Douglas Adams in its ability to combine the sublime and the comical into one neat and surprisingly profound package.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 7, 2024The book was damaged and bad writing on/in it and there was no dust jacket as advertised.
Top reviews from other countries
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CarlaReviewed in Mexico on November 6, 20245.0 out of 5 stars Perfecto
Yodo muy bien, el libro me encantó para seguir la historia.
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roussel marylineReviewed in France on May 19, 20215.0 out of 5 stars Efficacité envoi soigné livre conforme au descriptif proposé
Roman littérature anglaise , ouvrage de qualité.
Dianne LafleurReviewed in Canada on August 3, 20185.0 out of 5 stars Good quality
Good quality ,, have not read yet !!
Isaac BlancoReviewed in Spain on December 5, 20192.0 out of 5 stars Disappointed...
If you have read the previous books, do not read this. Please.
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UmbertoReviewed in Italy on September 29, 20193.0 out of 5 stars Così così
Noioso, ho fatto fatica a finirlo. E' in inglese e ci vuole una buona conoscenza della lingua