LOVING this book. Every other page I want to mark a quote. Thought Wicked was intriguing, Son of a Witch, fabulous. This is even better.
Maguire is either an Asperger's person or intimately knows someone who is, as he so perfectly describes the journey of a character who grew up with no social interaction abandoned in a forest (King of the Forest?), and slowly learns the art of conversation and dealing with people and relationships through eventual painful life experience. Beautifully and brilliantly done.
I have a son with Asperger's...how interesting to view him as a "lion among men," not quite fitting in despite his ability to speak the same language. And how very interesting to view "cowardice" as inaction based on the inability to feel empathy or a connection with others. But this is a smart lion who carries a tin symbol of courage, because he does somehow sense this is something he lacks...and by having the physical medal, he therefore has corrected the problem, right? So literal, so Asperger's.
I also love the encounter with Cubbins, the child bear who is in charge of the Northern Bear clan. Whoever is youngest is "in charge" (ain't that the truth in real life! and what a pithy observation about toddlers in general, or the pull between parents and children) because as the bears get older, they forget...particularly poignant for me as my real grandfather's Alzheimer's progresses and we hold circular conversations over and over, stuck in a never ending loop, exactly like a nonsensical verbal exchange in Alice in Wonderland.
Did I mention how intellectually satisfying Maguire is?! It seems that every moment I spend with one of his novels is time spent well. I will no doubt owe the stupid library five bucks by the time I'm done with this one.
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Some readers of Son of a Witch complained that Liir moped and groused and whined and laid in a figurative and literal coma for pages and pages before taking action, fulfilling his destiny, reaching his potential. I could see them really tearing their hair out over this poor "cowardly" Lion.
I happen to really enjoy the intellectual exercise of reading Maguire. He's been called a "wordsmith," but he's an "ideasmith" just as surely. I think he's fascinating.
In this 3rd Wicked novel, Maguire further explores perspective. What if the Wicked Witch, seen from a different angle, was really a misperceived freedom fighter, an intellectual hothead radical, and the Wizard an evil suspicious fraud. Now let's reexamine the Lion as a nursing cub ripped from his mother to become subject to laboratory experiments then thrown back into the forest, alone. He has no family, no social system, no language. We easily understand how hard it must be to master language (or the ability to be understood or truly communicate) without all the social context. But, there is so much more that goes with it such as the ability to feel empathy, and create bonds, real relationships. It is this lack of bonds and the resulting persecution from others that leads this Lion to being labeled "cowardly."
Some people choose to not enter true relationships with others, fear holds them back. Fortunately our Lion is more like an Asperger's person, who did not choose this condition or his lacking natural reactions. He is capable of learning how to relate, through lots of hard, confusing, real-life experience, giving him one piece of the puzzle at a time. Love the poignant ending. He finally learns how to be a friend, how to truly care about another.
Maguire is able to turn well-known children's fantasy upside down as an exercise in perspective and motive because he gives the story a realism that allows us to suspend our disbelief and go along with him on his ride. What an interesting journey -- the dialogue, wry humor, the surprises, and the deep philosophical observations.
The Lion is so socially awkward! I can't help but cheer for him as he struggles to connect with his humanity.