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Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West

Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West

List Price: $15.00
Your Price: $10.20
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Amazing & unforgettable story--but get large-print edition
Review: Lots of others here have extolled the virtues of this story--I'll just add a practical detail:

The font size of the standard large-paperback edition is just absurdly small--maybe a 9-font--and has prevented several able-eyed people I know from buying it when I show it to them at bookstores. Maybe Mr. Maguire raised a stink about it, because his second novel, I notice, has comparatively giant type.

So I would advise buying the large-print if it's still available...and that's the only gripe I have about this wonderful, amazing story.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Captivating
Review: If you think this is kiddie fare or a regurgitation of the Wizard of Oz, think again. Maguire has created a fascinating and often dark Oz with characters that do not break out into song and are even more interesting as a result. The Wicked Witch of the West's background is gripping, and--gasp--actually even makes this most-hated of cultural icons a sympathetic character.

Well written, entertaining, and imaginative. I can't wait to read Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wicked: Wickedly Funny
Review: This book was great! It was wonderful to hear the witch's side of the story. Gregory Maguire has a beautiful writing style. He is easy to understand and is very witty.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This is "Balthazar" to "Justine" (for you Durrell fans)
Review: While much attention is paid in many reviews of this book to Maguire's exploration of "evil" (what is "Evil"?, and what isn't it?), the most thrilling thing about this novel for me was the way it managed to contain a familiar story and simultaneously stand it on its head.

While reading "Wicked" I felt much as I did the first time I read "Balthazar" (Book 2) from the Alexandria Quartet, where the flowing, impressionistic images of "Justine" (Book 1) are turned and shifted in such a way that you realize the narrator of "Justine" had only a two-dimensional take on the real story.

Maguire does the same thing here: Oz blossoms into three- and four-dimensionality, a place of intense political tension, terrorism, racism and an oppressive puritanicism that gives rise to a raunchy sex-club underground.

The prose, especially the dialog, also has a Durrellesque archness, and is just as beautiful (without being quite so difficult ;).

The character of Elphaba (the "Wicked" Witch of the West) is one of the most fascinatingly complicated and sympathetic characters I've come across in a work of fiction.

Read it!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Raises disturbing questions about nature of evil
Review: If you can find a better bang for the buck than Wicked, please let me know. I picked up Wicked, knowing nothing except that its subject matter was the Wicked Witch of the West, to be drawn immediately into Maguire's splendidly imagined world of sentient animals, multiple societies, and unique physical laws. Wicked is an enthralling, great read, hugely entertaining. On top of all this, Maguire has Bradbury's gift for creating atmosphere. The pages are heavy with dark, mysterious magic; its moral laws are ultimately incomprehensible.

Apparently doomed at conception, Elphaba is a truly terrifying infant. Razor-toothed and preternaturally intelligent, she is shunned from birth as a freak and a curse. She is nonetheless the tale's most complex, human, and compelling character, possessed of high moral sense and great courage. But neither of these qualities enables a single one of her brave, ethical actions to succeed. What are we to conclude from this?

How is it that Dorothy, the sturdy little nobody from nowhere who committed manslaughter as she landed in Oz, skips down the Yellow Brick Road impervious to danger while Elphaba strives and plots to reap only negative results?

Why is one protected while the other is doomed? Read Wicked and you will learn how the witch's monkeys became winged, where the rubies for those slippers came from, and, indeed, why the witch's skin was green. But you will wrestle, long afterward, with Maguire's moral pessimism and the snarl of grace and doom that underlies this novel. I know I will.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: EXCELLENT!
Review: This book is wonderful, amazing, and excellent. I can't say enough good things about it. It is the life story of the Wicked Witch of the West, from birth to death, and it is not a kid's book. For anyone who likes the movie, anyone who likes fantasy, or anyone whose ever asked themselves, "Why shouldn't she have HER SISTER'S shoes?" Read this one, you won't be dissapointed!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A fantastic tale of the good side of wickedness.
Review: Ah the misunderstood life of a "witch". If you are like me and always thought that there was more than met the eye with witch of the west, then this book is for you. Or even if you are looking for a study of how percieved evil and true evil are truely different. Believe me you won't be dissapointed. This book is in my opinion one of the greatest books I've read in a loooong time. Enjoy..

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: highly entertaining read
Review: Looking for something light to read after a long semester of Shakespeare, I quenched my overwrought mind with WICKED. It's entertaining, innovative, and better than one might expect-- I could not believe the premise could be fleshed out so feasibly. On a scale of one to five, five being William Faulkner, this is a three. Well written and entertaining, but it's not destined for canonization or anything.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This is the single most fabulous book I have ever read!
Review: Absolutly dazzling cleverness and unspeakable prose. I am amazed at Maguire's skill, and he has become my new literary God. Read it; it will take you to another world that you have never seen even a glimmer of!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of my favorite books of all time!
Review: When this book first came out in paperback, I passed it many times in the bookstore and never thought of even picking it up. Judging by its cover (something we're not supposed to do), it didn't seem like the type of book I would like. Then, one day, for some reason unknown to me, I was finally inspired to pick it up, and suddenly was compelled to read it. I couldn't put it down. I identified so strongly with Elphaba and felt she was such a strong character. I cried when the book ended; I hated to put it down. Truly one of my favorite books of all time. I just bought Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister and can't wait to start reading it.


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