Title:
The Wizard of Oz (The Wonderful Wizard of Oz)
Author:
L. Frank Baum
Read
by: Anna Fields
Publisher:
Blackstone Audio
Length:
Approximately 4 hours and 35 minutes
Source:
From the Kewaunee Public Library through the Overdrive System
The
kids really enjoyed listening to this audiobook version of The Wizard of Oz on
a recent trip to Milwaukee. My 12-year
old son Kile feigned indifference, but ten-year old Daniel kept saying we
needed to make our breaks in the trip short to get back into the car to finish
up the book. We picked this book as part
of a family reading challenge for the Kewaunee Public Library this summer. I wasn’t sure how to get the kids 12, 10, and
7 years old in one spot reading at the same time and this worked!
I’ve
only ever seen the movie and have never read the book. The book seemed like a new Grimm’s fairy
tale. It had fantastic elements of
fantasy and was very interesting, but it also had very blood thirsty elements
as well. In particular, the tin woodman
has a very interesting back story that left us scratching our heads on how he
could still be “alive” and he seemed to be handy chopping animals heads off
with his ax. This is one book that I
think the movie really improved on the book.
The boys thought these elements were hilarious, but we are all still
disturbed about the tin woodman chopping a cat in half for chasing a mouse. I’m
not sure what moral lesson we are supposed to learn from that!
Anna
Fields is a good narrator who gave different voices to the characters. We started off with a different version of
this audiobook which was much drier. We
made the switch and were happy with it.
The only odd thing was event though we were listening to a digital
version, it kept saying “end of disk 1” and whatnot like it was a CD. I’ve never had a digital version do that
before.
I
also thought it was interesting that the book is named The Wonderful Wizard of
Oz, but the title was changed for the movie to The Wizard of Oz. Now when they
print the book, they call it The Wizard of Oz or The Wonderful Wizard of Oz
depending on the edition. This is
slightly confusing. There are also numerous
sequels. L. Frank Bauem wrote 13 sequels
and then many more were written by others after his death. It makes me wonder what else happens to the
story as it goes further. Anyone a
Wizard of Oz series fan out there with some recommendations?
Favorite
Quotes:
“There is no place like home.”“A heart is not judged by how much you love; but by how much you are loved by others”
“Some people without brains do an awful lot of talking, don't you think?”
Overall, our
family enjoyed The Wizard of Oz. It was
a Grimm fairy tale type fantasy story that was interesting, but also written
rather unevenly.
