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The Road to Oz por L. Frank Baum
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The Road to Oz (edición 1991)

por L. Frank Baum (Autor)

Series: Oz (5), Oz : Famous Forty (book 5)

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2,224317,146 (3.7)37
Classic Literature. Fantasy. Juvenile Fiction. HTML:

The fifth novel in Baum's beloved series of stories about the magical land of Oz, The Road to Oz recounts Dorothy's fourth interlude in Oz, during which she encounters whimsically imaginative characters such as Shaggy Man, Polychrome, and Button Bright. A masterwork of imaginative fiction, this book is a must-read for fans of classic children's literature.

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Miembro:katfield13
Título:The Road to Oz
Autores:L. Frank Baum (Autor)
Información:HarperCollins (1991), 267 pages
Colecciones:Tu biblioteca
Valoración:
Etiquetas:Ninguno

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The Road to Oz por L. Frank Baum

  1. 00
    El Castillo de Lord Valentine por Robert Silverberg (aulsmith)
    aulsmith: If you enjoy the camaraderie of the friends on a series of adventures with magic things popping up but want something better written and more adult, give the Silverberg a try.
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» Ver también 37 menciones

Mostrando 1-5 de 31 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
It's been a while since I read this series--I'd like to read it again soon. ( )
  swigget | Dec 9, 2023 |
A 1909 children's novel, book 5 in the Oz series.

Dorothy and some new friends are lost and try to get to Oz.

C+ (Okay).

As this series goes on, there's less and less new stuff, and more and more space taken up with exhaustive curtain calls of every character who's ever been in a previous book. In this case Dorothy's adventure is over only slightly more than half way through the book. I did still like it a little more than the previous book; it's more coherent, and the long anti-climax was at least thoroughly foreshadowed.

(Nov. 2022) ( )
  comfypants | Nov 17, 2022 |
Like Marvelous Land of Oz, Road to Oz is one where my childhood copy was a Puffin Classic. The Puffin edition of Marvelous Land was sparsely illustrated... the Puffin of Road was not illustrated at all! Thus it is probably little wonder that Road was never one of my favorite Oz novels, with no pictures to fire the imagination. I eagerly picked up the Books of Wonder facsimile, then, as I knew that—like the original—it had colored paper for pages. Though this is (I think) the only one of Baum's original fourteen to have no color illustrations, the colors shift as the characters travel from land to land as they progress from Kansas to the Emerald City. I found the colors somewhat ill-chosen (why are the Winkie chapters not yellow!?), but they definitely worked as intended on my three-year-old son, who was excited every time the pages changed color, and often demanded we skip ahead so they would change color. ("I want to read a green chapter!") The illustrations are great, too, and I'm sorry I didn't have them as a child.

Road is a pretty aimless Oz novel. Unlike in previous Oz journey narratives (Wonderful Wizard and Dorothy and the Wizard), there's little sense of impetus or threat. The characters have to get to Oz in time for a birthday party. Not exactly high stakes. On top of that, they get there about two-thirds of the way through, and the last third is just descriptions of people coming to the party and games they play and revisits with characters from previous books (we see the Tin Woodman's Tin Castle and Jack Pumpkinhead's giant pumpkinhead house; Billina updates us on how many progeny she has). So this is the other reason this one has never ranked highly.

But it turns out that if you're reading one or two chapters aloud a day, that something is episodic isn't a bug... it's a feature! The book becomes a succession of short stories. Maybe Baum knew what he was doing after all. I did particularly like the encounter with the Scoodlers (I love Button-Bright's "don't want to be soup!"), and Son One seemed to be into Johnny Dooit. Indeed, he was pretty into this one overall, telling me he had a dog head after we read about Button-Bright and the Shaggy Man getting fox and donkey heads, and repeating Button-Bright's trademark "don't know" a lot and even telling his mother about John Dough, the living gingerbread man (a crossover with Baum's John Dough and the Cherub, the only of Baum's Nonestic/Burzee fantasies I don't own). He was also quick to point out that my Shaggy Man voice is pretty much my Scarecrow voice. Hey, a guy can only make so many voices.

I did still think it dragged once they got to Oz, though. And everyone here seems to totally forget about Ozma and Dorothy's daily Magic Picture check-in from the previous book! Which, to be fair, would end this book before it started... but that's why it was such a bad idea to begin with.
1 vota Stevil2001 | Jan 21, 2022 |
I've been reading through all of the Oz books and have found them to be quite entertaining ... until now. Nothing much actually happens in this one. I found it boring (and somewhat absurd when Santa Claus shows up). Seriously, I felt like Baum was phoning it in with this one. The newly introduced characters were as boring as the plot. Zero charm. ( )
  AliceAnna | Jan 20, 2022 |
L. Frank Baum is an author I have read many times since I first discovered him in second grade. I find that his books stand up to the test of time and they are books that I enjoy re-reading. Some of them are stronger than others but as a whole I quite enjoy both the stories and characters. ( )
  KateKat11 | Sep 24, 2021 |
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Nombre del autorRolTipo de autor¿Obra?Estado
L. Frank Baumautor principaltodas las edicionescalculado
Neill, John ReaIlustradorautor principalalgunas edicionesconfirmado
Glassman, PeterEpílogoautor secundarioalgunas edicionesconfirmado
Lowe, WesArtista de Cubiertaautor secundarioalgunas edicionesconfirmado
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To my first grandson
Joslyn Stanton Baum
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"Please, miss," said the shaggy man, "can you tell me the road to Butterfield?"
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Please do not combine L. Frank Baum's The Road to Oz with the Little Golden Book adaptation of the same title, or with other abridgments, young reader's editions, anthologies, etc. Thank you.
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Classic Literature. Fantasy. Juvenile Fiction. HTML:

The fifth novel in Baum's beloved series of stories about the magical land of Oz, The Road to Oz recounts Dorothy's fourth interlude in Oz, during which she encounters whimsically imaginative characters such as Shaggy Man, Polychrome, and Button Bright. A masterwork of imaginative fiction, this book is a must-read for fans of classic children's literature.

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