Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West (The Wicked Years #1)
When Dorothy triumphed over the Wicked Witch of the West in L. Frank Baum's classic tale, we heard only her side of the story. But what about her arch-nemesis, the mysterious witch? Where did she come from? How did she become so wicked? And what is the true nature of evil?
Gregory Maguire creates a fantasy world so rich and vivid that we will never look at Oz the same way
...moreHardcover, 406 pages
Published
September 29th 1995
by William Morrow
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Instead of my usual griping style, we'll do this review in list form.
Things That I Really Wish Gregory Maguire Had Bothered To Explain That Might Have Made Wicked Worth Reading:
-Why Elphaba is green
-Why Elphaba cannot touch water
-The "Philosophy Club" which seemed to be some sort of bizarre sex club which was introduced towards the middle of the story, and then never mentioned again
-How it's physically possible that Elphaba gave birth to a son, but may actually not have, because she doesn't rem...more
Things That I Really Wish Gregory Maguire Had Bothered To Explain That Might Have Made Wicked Worth Reading:
-Why Elphaba is green
-Why Elphaba cannot touch water
-The "Philosophy Club" which seemed to be some sort of bizarre sex club which was introduced towards the middle of the story, and then never mentioned again
-How it's physically possible that Elphaba gave birth to a son, but may actually not have, because she doesn't rem...more
Dec 08, 2010
David
rated it
1 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
people who like modern takes on fairy tales and who can't read beyond a 5th grade level
Recommended to David by:
Steve W
I have a confession: I wanted to read this book because I saw the Broadway show, and the idea of a Broadway show based on a book based on a movie based on a political satire intrigued me. I heard the book and the show were quite different, so I wanted to see the difference.
The biggest difference is that the show is good, and the book is not. I don't want to be mean to the poor author (Gregory Maguire), who has made a fortune and franchise from this book and ones like it, but it's absolutely terr...more
The biggest difference is that the show is good, and the book is not. I don't want to be mean to the poor author (Gregory Maguire), who has made a fortune and franchise from this book and ones like it, but it's absolutely terr...more
Sep 22, 2009
Claire Greene
added it
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
Nobody - literally not one body
I hated this book. Maybe it was because I was expecting so much with all the hype, maybe because I thought the original idea was so great, whatever. End result, I freaking hated this book. This is a book that makes you want to sit down and re-write it yourself because it is such a shame that such a great idea was so mishandled. I loved the idea of delving into the witches and their past and seeing them from a different view point. I loved the idea of the politics of the different realms of OZ....more
This book as become increasingly popular, mostly due to the success of the musical by the same name. the truth is however, its not very good. There are many interesting and intriguing plotlines in the book, and you wait for them to be clerified, and expanded upon, but many never are. many fantastic characters are introduced, and are hinted at playing an important roll later in the book.. doesnt happen. the book doesnt even really give you the background you want on the witch. it is made clear fr...more
I’ve pretty much stopped buying lunch at my work cafeteria because no matter how often the description of the day’s entrée induces those salivary glands into action, the end result is always terribly disappointing. The food looks like it should be good—braised beef that seems savory, fresh-looking tomatoes to impart a robust flavor, colorful specks of herbs that hint of a certain deliciousness and make the tummy grumble. So it’s a fresh shock to the system almost every time when it turns out to...more
From the first page, I couldn't put the book down. I loved it! And as my love for the book Wicked and the Wicked Witch of the West grew, my hatred for George Lucas grew in direct proportion. How could he have gotten it so wrong?
I never pretended to like the new trilogy. It could have been a new story. It could have really delved into the character of Darth Vader, or rather Anakin Skywalker and truly made him tragic.
Instead of trying to fool the audience into liking Anakin by hiring cute kids an...more
I never pretended to like the new trilogy. It could have been a new story. It could have really delved into the character of Darth Vader, or rather Anakin Skywalker and truly made him tragic.
Instead of trying to fool the audience into liking Anakin by hiring cute kids an...more
As far as fairy tales are concerned, adults recall them to be simple moral stories of how things go wrong if you want the wrong things. As fond of them as adults may be, the stories aren't often dissected, interpreted, or believed in for much farther than that.
The brilliance behind Maguire's books, is his capability of understanding that both the fantasy world and the real world can be united by infiltrating the mystical with hard situations, realistic emotions, and simple human spirit. Even in...more
The brilliance behind Maguire's books, is his capability of understanding that both the fantasy world and the real world can be united by infiltrating the mystical with hard situations, realistic emotions, and simple human spirit. Even in...more
Jan 11, 2008
Amy
rated it
2 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
book clubs; fans of the stage show
Recommended to Amy by:
a particularly messy houseguest
Shelves:
finished-out-of-a-sense-of-obligati
I don't remember the original impetus for reading this book - I do recall discussing it with a particular friend, but whether I read it on her recommendation or because I wanted to all on my own I don't recall.
As is evident from my star-rating, I can't say that I liked this book. I did really like the first chapter, when Elphaba was this awful baby, with her terrible teeth and who would only say 'Horrors', as though she were an infant Kurtz. But each successive chapter I liked less and less, unt...more
As is evident from my star-rating, I can't say that I liked this book. I did really like the first chapter, when Elphaba was this awful baby, with her terrible teeth and who would only say 'Horrors', as though she were an infant Kurtz. But each successive chapter I liked less and less, unt...more
May 13, 2008
Jennifer Wardrip
rated it
4 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
trt-posted-reviews
Reviewed by K. Osborn Sullivan for TeensReadToo.com
Have you ever read a popular book and wondered why it was so popular? That's exactly how I felt as I worked my way through WICKED. Actually, that's not entirely true. I know why it's a New York Times Bestseller. Part of it has to do with the reason I picked the book up in the first place. I expected a light, fairy tale-like story. It's based on a children's book. There's a Broadway musical about it. Sounds like it should be fun, right? Uh, not q...more
Have you ever read a popular book and wondered why it was so popular? That's exactly how I felt as I worked my way through WICKED. Actually, that's not entirely true. I know why it's a New York Times Bestseller. Part of it has to do with the reason I picked the book up in the first place. I expected a light, fairy tale-like story. It's based on a children's book. There's a Broadway musical about it. Sounds like it should be fun, right? Uh, not q...more
This book was bad. The idea is that you get to see how the Wicked Witch of the West grew up, see her side of things, and get some backstory about Oz. The book failed to make any of this engaging.
The backstory dragged on for far too long. Of course, I wouldn't complain if the backstory had been interesting instead of just.. *there.* It also manages to be puzzling in a vague way that detracts more than it adds.
The story afterward just meanders everywhere. There is no sense of direction and huge se...more
The backstory dragged on for far too long. Of course, I wouldn't complain if the backstory had been interesting instead of just.. *there.* It also manages to be puzzling in a vague way that detracts more than it adds.
The story afterward just meanders everywhere. There is no sense of direction and huge se...more
I enjoyed reading Wicked, but found it perplexing.
Maguire's Oz is a complex, political society, and his Wicked Witch Elphaba and her contemporaries are fascinating, moving, original characters--but the landscape and people are so far removed from their base story that the purpose of the reimagining, reworking seems lost to me. There's no particularly compelling reason to set this novel in the framework of Baum's Oz story; it doesn't gain anything by the association and it doesn't lend any insi...more
Maguire's Oz is a complex, political society, and his Wicked Witch Elphaba and her contemporaries are fascinating, moving, original characters--but the landscape and people are so far removed from their base story that the purpose of the reimagining, reworking seems lost to me. There's no particularly compelling reason to set this novel in the framework of Baum's Oz story; it doesn't gain anything by the association and it doesn't lend any insi...more
I had the vaguely unique opportunity to approach MacGuire's most famous work without any immediate familiarity with his source material. I had neither read L. Baum's original work nor seen the Judy Garland vehicle. Certainly, some of the Oz mythos has filtered down into society at large over the years and I am broadly aware of some of the stories more famous bits.
I knew of the yellow brick road—upon which I presumed the entire tale took place. I knew of the ruby slippers, though little more than...more
I knew of the yellow brick road—upon which I presumed the entire tale took place. I knew of the ruby slippers, though little more than...more
Here is yet one more instance that supports the old adage that “hindsight is 20/20,” because had I known how much I’d have enjoyed this book, I’d have read it sooner. I have no one to blame but myself for taking all the negative reviews so seriously.
For starters, there are several types of people who should not read this book because it will make them angry. The biggest one is that group of folks who is opposed to S-E-X appearing in books. The sexy scenes in this book are not graphic. They aren...more
For starters, there are several types of people who should not read this book because it will make them angry. The biggest one is that group of folks who is opposed to S-E-X appearing in books. The sexy scenes in this book are not graphic. They aren...more
Dec 05, 2011
Rachel
rated it
4 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
Adult readers who enjoyed reading L. Frank Baum's Oz books and are not offended by freaky sex scenes
Reading this book was like returning to an old friend ... it was written in the style of the Oz books I had enjoyed as a kid, except now ... with X-RATED COMICAL PASSAGES! Woo-hoo!
I bring this up because I see a lot of people posting that they take offense at the sexual nature of some of the passages. I think the author was trying to portray Oz as an "other world" loosely patterned after the European Renaissance (not entirely, of course: details such as train travel came later). From my underst...more
I bring this up because I see a lot of people posting that they take offense at the sexual nature of some of the passages. I think the author was trying to portray Oz as an "other world" loosely patterned after the European Renaissance (not entirely, of course: details such as train travel came later). From my underst...more
Very interesting book! Lots to like, and lots to dislike, but overall I enjoyed it, definitely wanted to keep reading, and found a lot to think about. What struck me most is the story of Elphaba alone. She starts life as an outcast for various reasons, & really never recovers, though she's bright, determined, brave, a good friend and caring family member, and in some ways sensitive, though self-involved. The book seems to cast her as someone of great promise despite her rough start in life....more
I’ve been trying to get through this book since last summer, and THANK GOD ON HIGH I finally finished it last night. Given that Wicked was popular with both critics and lay people, AND the fact that there’s a wildly successful stage play associated with it, I figured this book couldn’t possibly disappoint. And yet…
First, the themes/motifs were all. over. the. place. Animal rights, “otherness”, gender, good v. evil, and religion were the major players underlying the plot. And when I say underlyin...more
First, the themes/motifs were all. over. the. place. Animal rights, “otherness”, gender, good v. evil, and religion were the major players underlying the plot. And when I say underlyin...more
Apr 02, 2008
Helen
rated it
4 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
People who find the below description appealing
Recommended to Helen by:
The Witch of Fluff
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it,
click here.
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it,
click here.
My own peculiar obsession with The Wizard of Oz, in both its book and movie forms, was both a boon and, at times, a slight disadvantage to reading this book: since our culture's two primary references for the Oz story are so very different, Mr Maguire has a fascinating dilemma in trying to create a narrative that honors both, and is also something new. He does so brilliantly, re-imagining characters, places, and circumstances of the movie and the books (most notably the second one, The Land of O...more
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it,
click here.
Mar 27, 2008
Nola
rated it
4 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
someone who wants a new look at Oz
Shelves:
fiction-drama
Wicked is the story of the infamous Wicked Witch of the West, told from the perspective that that the well-known fairy tale may not be all true. The premise of the novel is certainly interesting, and the themes it follows certainly make you think. The characters were well created and three dimensional, right up to the end, where everything went sour.
The story begins, not with the witch but with the events of her birth. We follow young Elphaba (what, you thought her parents just called her ‘Wic...more
The story begins, not with the witch but with the events of her birth. We follow young Elphaba (what, you thought her parents just called her ‘Wic...more
Jun 05, 2008
Jenny
rated it
2 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
no one... period
Shelves:
wish-i-had-not-read
I had mixed feelings about this book. On one hand the plot is very interesting. On the other, the author makes so many sexual references and adds scenes that are not even needed for the plot that it almost ruins the book. It seems he thinks the real learning arena is sexual encounters and sensory gratification. I also think he blurs the lines between real good and real evil. Obviously those who are different are not really evil. But killing, even for political reasons and vengence, is evil. The...more
I received my copy of this book as a Christmas present from a teacher and friend, and I had no idea that it would turn out to be one of my favorite books and favorite authors. My mother had brought me up loving the stories where the told the other side of the tale, that tried to explain that things aren't so black and white, and maybe there's a good reason for the "villain" to be doing what she's doing. Things like Fractured Fairy Tales from Rocky and Bullwinkle, and The True Story of the Three...more
Don't waste your time! And don't let your teen read it. I kept reading to the bitter end of this book hoping that suddenly it would all come together in a glorious flash of beautiful, meaningful allegory that would make all the crap worth it. Not even. I was just really mad when I was done that I'd wasted so much time on it hoping that it'd pull through.
Not only did it delve into the kinky, it was just plain boring and didn't make sense to me.
If you're interested in it because of the broadway mu...more
Not only did it delve into the kinky, it was just plain boring and didn't make sense to me.
If you're interested in it because of the broadway mu...more
My favorite thing about this book was how well written it was. I rarely see that quality of writing. It was also a page-turner, I couldn't sleep until it was done. The characters were all very lusty though, I probably shouldn't have finished reading it, but I was hooked after just a few pages. Not recommended.
This is one of my favorites. I generally like McGuire's books, but in my opinion this is by far the best of them.
After reading my teenaged years away through endless sci-fi/fantasy books where the characters are often painfully stereotypical, it is refreshing to encounter a book where the protagonist is deeply flawed, but yet we respect her. The characters and interpersonal relationships in this book are complicated but leave you guessing about details that occur behind the scenes and curious a...more
After reading my teenaged years away through endless sci-fi/fantasy books where the characters are often painfully stereotypical, it is refreshing to encounter a book where the protagonist is deeply flawed, but yet we respect her. The characters and interpersonal relationships in this book are complicated but leave you guessing about details that occur behind the scenes and curious a...more
When I first began reading this book, I was delighted at the feeling of being enveloped in this dark, Grimm Fairy Tale type place called Oz. The concept of the time dragon, the dwarf-operated marionette machine completely spooked me. The baby elphaba with her green skin and huge teeth was freakish, yet I could feel a tenderness at her otherness, the trouble she would surely find fitting in.
From then on, the book became much less interesting or sympathetic. Elphaba never morphed into a likable c...more
From then on, the book became much less interesting or sympathetic. Elphaba never morphed into a likable c...more
Ugh. Where do I start? I am giving this book one star, even though it appears that I am in the minority in thinking this. I got through the first couple of sections and I just couldn't stand it anymore. It was painful. I'm sure the Broadway musical is great; I really do want to see it some day. People who have seen the musical and have read the book too say that they are very different. I hope this is true. As I turned each page, I found myself skipping entire paragraphs out of sheer boredom. Th...more
Oct 22, 2007
Robin
rated it
1 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
people who don't mind books with no closure
It would be giving the book too much credit to say that it went nowhere fast. It was, in fact,a slow, painful journey.
I'd heard great things about the musical and thought therefore, that the book would be somewhat great. Nope. The first problem is that it's hard to get used to the language. A lot of completely new words come up, and you get used to reading them over and over and figure you'll eventually find out what this new vocabulary means, but you won't. Time passes very strangely between t...more
I'd heard great things about the musical and thought therefore, that the book would be somewhat great. Nope. The first problem is that it's hard to get used to the language. A lot of completely new words come up, and you get used to reading them over and over and figure you'll eventually find out what this new vocabulary means, but you won't. Time passes very strangely between t...more
| topics | posts | views | last activity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Who else here thinks that the musical was amazing and miles better than the book? | 106 | 416 | May 06, 2013 08:49pm | |
| How Did the Broadway Musical of this Book Compare to the Book's Message | 11 | 129 | May 06, 2013 04:36pm | |
| have you read? | 14 | 86 | May 06, 2013 04:32pm | |
| the musical | 59 | 156 | Apr 27, 2013 08:33pm | |
| Should I get the next book? | 16 | 167 | Apr 10, 2013 11:58am |
Gregory Maguire is an American author, whose novels are revisionist retellings of children's stories (such as L. Frank Baum's The Wonderful Wizard of Oz into Wicked). He received his Ph.D. in English and American Literature from Tufts University, and his B.A. from the State University of New York at Albany. He was a professor and co-director at the Simmons College Center for the Study of Children'...more
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“People who claim that they're evil are usually no worse than the rest of us... It's people who claim that they're good, or any way better than the rest of us, that you have to be wary of.”
—
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“Remember this: Nothing is written in the stars. Not these stars, nor any others. No one controls your destiny.”
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Apr 04, 2013 07:42pm
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