Dorothy Must Die
ByDanielle Paige★ ★ ★ ★ ★ | |
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆ | |
★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆ | |
★ ★ ☆ ☆ ☆ | |
★ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ |
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Readers` Reviews
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
emily swartz
Very well written. It was a different spin on the Oz that I have always known. Dorothy as the villain is a cool spin to Dorothy the victim. A little creepy how the Tin Woodman, Scarecrow, and Lion are portrayed.
★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆
audrey babkirk wellons
Definitely had its ups and downs. Good over evil perhaps? But is evil always completely bad ...or is good always right....to each his own...I think....lots of contradictions but also a little deeper meaning exists
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
happily ever chapter
One year after Amy Gumm's father abandoned his family and four years before the accident that robbed Amy of her mother, leaving her addicted to pain pills, she learned the difference between the haves and the have-nots. She was Salvation Amy, trailer trash and social pariah -- a status underscored by her mother's subsequent emotional abandonment. Tears weren't worth the effort, and if she was ever going to escape her hardscrabble Kansas existence, the only one she could rely on was herself. After getting expelled and fighting with her mother, Amy makes a fateful wish: "There's no place like anywhere but here." When a tornado threat materializes, striking her trailer park, the unthinkable happens -- drawn into the storm's furious power, she awakens on the edge of a steep ravine, saved from tumbling to her death in the only home she knows by a boy with emerald green eyes. A boy who tells her that she's not in Kansas anymore...she's in Oz.
But this is no hallucination. The story Amy grew up with is true, but the reality of Oz is a far cry from the Technicolor-splendor that fed her childish imaginings. Oz's emerald-green, poppy-strewn countryside has been leeched of color, turned into a post-apocalyptic wasteland, with all of its resources, the magic that makes up the land's very essence, being mined and pulled to one central location: Emerald City, where Dorothy Gale sits on the throne. Amy quickly learns that the story didn't end with Dorothy's return to Kansas -- the gingham-clad heroine returned, attached herself to Ozma, and with the help of her allies the Scarecrow, Tin Woodman, and not-so-cowardly Lion, began to lay claim to Oz's magical resources. Can one outcast girl from Kansas undo another's unspeakable crimes? For joining the Revolutionary Order of the Wicked has a cost, for if Dorothy must die, Amy must find the power within to seize her fate, or risk falling prey to the various factions within Oz locked in a bitter power struggle.
At the beginning of the year I devoured Paige's prequel novella, No Place Like Oz, and fell in love with her deliciously subversive continuation of The Wizard of Oz. The original story and film are undeniable classics, but I've always gravitated towards retellings that turned the original story on its head -- Wicked the musical, SyFy's Tin Man miniseries, and most recently the Oz-centric arc on ABC's Once Upon a Time. In No Place Like Oz, Paige hit all the right notes when transforming Dorothy the innocent into a selfish, would-be princess. Paige's Dorothy is a study in teenage immaturity run amok, and with her full-length debut she delves into the resultant fallout of Dorothy's fateful choices through Amy's eyes, a girl more like her tornado-traveling predecessor than she'd like to believe.
And so it was with great anticipation that I delved into the pages of Paige's full-length debut, and Amy's decidedly modern, 21st-century take on her beloved childhood classic gone very, very wrong. I've read some reviews commenting on their disappointment that this is the first of a series, and not a self-contained story. Somewhere between reading the prequel novella and this book's release, I read about the proposed sequels, so I was prepared for this to be the first installment in a longer, epic journey. However, I will say that as such, the headline-grabbing title is a bit misleading -- for while Dorothy's death may be the desired endgame for Amy and her rebel friends, it is far from resolved in this installment.
Pacing is an issue here, as our introduction to this deliciously twisted take on Oz spans over four hundred pages and succeeds in barely scratching the surface of what is necessary for Amy to learn in order to bring Dorothy down. Nearly sixty percent of the novel covers Amy's introduction to Oz, her commission by the Revolutionary Order of the Wicked, and training. In that respect it ticks all the boxes necessary to be classified as dystopian YA -- spunky heroine with untapped potential, brooding love interest (Nox! *swoon*), eccentric supporting players, and a level of action and violence reminiscent in its intensity of The Hunger Games (or, I presume, Divergent, based on having seen that film). While there's far too much time spent prepping Amy for her mission into Dorothy's palace, I can't complain too much because I thoroughly enjoyed the ride. Having read several of the original Baum novels as a child, I loved seeing Paige twist the source material into something new, capable of spine-tingling chills and surprises by virtue of turning classic characters and their world on its head.
If Dorothy's original journey was about finding home, and getting the Tin Man a heart, the Cowardly Lion his courage, and the Scarecrow a brain, then Dorothy Must Die is a study in consequences. How those consequences play out remain to be seen, as this first volume only hints at Paige's ultimate narrative arc. However, I'm fascinated by the concept of Amy as a "new Dorothy" being tasked with undoing a grave wrong. For while the items they valued - heart, brain, courage -- are in and of themselves good, Amy's experiences call into question whether or not those gifts should ever have been granted. Did the gifts change the recipients? Or did what each individual in question most value subsequently change, and in doing so unleash havoc beyond imagining on Oz and its people? Therefore, if Amy's ultimate mission is to undo everything her predecessor put into motion, that begs the question -- how will Oz impact her, and vice-versa? It's a conceit I cannot wait to see play out in subsequent volumes!
While Oz's traditional heroes are find themselves transformed into villains within the pages of this volume -- to horrifying effect -- the lesser known, or new supporting characters that Paige crafts to flesh out her world are among the story's highlights. I particularly loved Ollie the one-time flying monkey, and his quest to free his imprisoned sister. The flying monkeys TERRIFIED me as a child, and Paige's spin on their powers and motivation adds a welcome layer of depth and poignancy to these previously nameless terrors. I also LOVED how Glinda, Oz's traditional "good" witch, is transformed into a villain and contrasted with her dark-magic twin Glamora. Glamora is hilariously snarky, but her harsh demeanor masks a heart-breaking history with her sister, a relationship that perfectly underscores the fact that nothing -- and no one -- is as it seems in this new Oz.
Dorothy Must Die is an absorbing, thoroughly entertaining, if flawed, debut, one that's left me incredibly eager for the next installment of this dark, twisted re-imagining of the classic Oz. The first third is incredibly exposition-heavy, but on balance I found Paige's decision to slowly and carefully dole out Oz's backstory wholly absorbing, as fascinating and appalling in turns as it must've seemed to the newly-arrived Amy. This is an Oz living in terror of being convicted of the Crime of Sass and sentenced to one of Dorothy's Official Attitude Adjustments, one where everything that was once good has gone horribly wrong -- and most terrifying of all, no one is immune to evil's seductive siren call. Despite its arguably excessive length and almost leisurely introduction to Amy and her mission, I absolutely devoured this book. By the final fourth, when Amy's mission kicks into high gear and the Wizard is introduced -- but his status as friend or foe remains to be seen -- the pages flew by, and the revelation of what exactly it will take to defeat Dorothy unfolds with a positively cinematic flair. Now that the exposition and set-up are complete, with a tighter narrative I have high hopes that subsequent installments will positively shine -- and I cannot wait to see where Paige's wonderfully twisted sense of humor and inventive imagination takes readers next!
But this is no hallucination. The story Amy grew up with is true, but the reality of Oz is a far cry from the Technicolor-splendor that fed her childish imaginings. Oz's emerald-green, poppy-strewn countryside has been leeched of color, turned into a post-apocalyptic wasteland, with all of its resources, the magic that makes up the land's very essence, being mined and pulled to one central location: Emerald City, where Dorothy Gale sits on the throne. Amy quickly learns that the story didn't end with Dorothy's return to Kansas -- the gingham-clad heroine returned, attached herself to Ozma, and with the help of her allies the Scarecrow, Tin Woodman, and not-so-cowardly Lion, began to lay claim to Oz's magical resources. Can one outcast girl from Kansas undo another's unspeakable crimes? For joining the Revolutionary Order of the Wicked has a cost, for if Dorothy must die, Amy must find the power within to seize her fate, or risk falling prey to the various factions within Oz locked in a bitter power struggle.
At the beginning of the year I devoured Paige's prequel novella, No Place Like Oz, and fell in love with her deliciously subversive continuation of The Wizard of Oz. The original story and film are undeniable classics, but I've always gravitated towards retellings that turned the original story on its head -- Wicked the musical, SyFy's Tin Man miniseries, and most recently the Oz-centric arc on ABC's Once Upon a Time. In No Place Like Oz, Paige hit all the right notes when transforming Dorothy the innocent into a selfish, would-be princess. Paige's Dorothy is a study in teenage immaturity run amok, and with her full-length debut she delves into the resultant fallout of Dorothy's fateful choices through Amy's eyes, a girl more like her tornado-traveling predecessor than she'd like to believe.
And so it was with great anticipation that I delved into the pages of Paige's full-length debut, and Amy's decidedly modern, 21st-century take on her beloved childhood classic gone very, very wrong. I've read some reviews commenting on their disappointment that this is the first of a series, and not a self-contained story. Somewhere between reading the prequel novella and this book's release, I read about the proposed sequels, so I was prepared for this to be the first installment in a longer, epic journey. However, I will say that as such, the headline-grabbing title is a bit misleading -- for while Dorothy's death may be the desired endgame for Amy and her rebel friends, it is far from resolved in this installment.
Pacing is an issue here, as our introduction to this deliciously twisted take on Oz spans over four hundred pages and succeeds in barely scratching the surface of what is necessary for Amy to learn in order to bring Dorothy down. Nearly sixty percent of the novel covers Amy's introduction to Oz, her commission by the Revolutionary Order of the Wicked, and training. In that respect it ticks all the boxes necessary to be classified as dystopian YA -- spunky heroine with untapped potential, brooding love interest (Nox! *swoon*), eccentric supporting players, and a level of action and violence reminiscent in its intensity of The Hunger Games (or, I presume, Divergent, based on having seen that film). While there's far too much time spent prepping Amy for her mission into Dorothy's palace, I can't complain too much because I thoroughly enjoyed the ride. Having read several of the original Baum novels as a child, I loved seeing Paige twist the source material into something new, capable of spine-tingling chills and surprises by virtue of turning classic characters and their world on its head.
If Dorothy's original journey was about finding home, and getting the Tin Man a heart, the Cowardly Lion his courage, and the Scarecrow a brain, then Dorothy Must Die is a study in consequences. How those consequences play out remain to be seen, as this first volume only hints at Paige's ultimate narrative arc. However, I'm fascinated by the concept of Amy as a "new Dorothy" being tasked with undoing a grave wrong. For while the items they valued - heart, brain, courage -- are in and of themselves good, Amy's experiences call into question whether or not those gifts should ever have been granted. Did the gifts change the recipients? Or did what each individual in question most value subsequently change, and in doing so unleash havoc beyond imagining on Oz and its people? Therefore, if Amy's ultimate mission is to undo everything her predecessor put into motion, that begs the question -- how will Oz impact her, and vice-versa? It's a conceit I cannot wait to see play out in subsequent volumes!
While Oz's traditional heroes are find themselves transformed into villains within the pages of this volume -- to horrifying effect -- the lesser known, or new supporting characters that Paige crafts to flesh out her world are among the story's highlights. I particularly loved Ollie the one-time flying monkey, and his quest to free his imprisoned sister. The flying monkeys TERRIFIED me as a child, and Paige's spin on their powers and motivation adds a welcome layer of depth and poignancy to these previously nameless terrors. I also LOVED how Glinda, Oz's traditional "good" witch, is transformed into a villain and contrasted with her dark-magic twin Glamora. Glamora is hilariously snarky, but her harsh demeanor masks a heart-breaking history with her sister, a relationship that perfectly underscores the fact that nothing -- and no one -- is as it seems in this new Oz.
Dorothy Must Die is an absorbing, thoroughly entertaining, if flawed, debut, one that's left me incredibly eager for the next installment of this dark, twisted re-imagining of the classic Oz. The first third is incredibly exposition-heavy, but on balance I found Paige's decision to slowly and carefully dole out Oz's backstory wholly absorbing, as fascinating and appalling in turns as it must've seemed to the newly-arrived Amy. This is an Oz living in terror of being convicted of the Crime of Sass and sentenced to one of Dorothy's Official Attitude Adjustments, one where everything that was once good has gone horribly wrong -- and most terrifying of all, no one is immune to evil's seductive siren call. Despite its arguably excessive length and almost leisurely introduction to Amy and her mission, I absolutely devoured this book. By the final fourth, when Amy's mission kicks into high gear and the Wizard is introduced -- but his status as friend or foe remains to be seen -- the pages flew by, and the revelation of what exactly it will take to defeat Dorothy unfolds with a positively cinematic flair. Now that the exposition and set-up are complete, with a tighter narrative I have high hopes that subsequent installments will positively shine -- and I cannot wait to see where Paige's wonderfully twisted sense of humor and inventive imagination takes readers next!
As Red as Blood :: Spelled (The Storymakers) :: (Book 1 of The Immortal Trilogy) (The Taker Trilogy) :: A Dorothy Must Die Prequel Novella (Dorothy Must Die series Book 1) :: Yellow Brick War (Dorothy Must Die)
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
sanjana
This was a very easy read, but it was interesting to see where such a classic childhood story could twist and turn in their "future." I am excited to read the rest of the books in this trilogy as well as the prequels.
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
angelina
Prepare yourself because this Oz is nothing like what you may have grown up on and yet I loved it all the same. This book will make you look at everything differently but in a good way. I loved the unique world the author created and how she spun the Oz tale on it’s head and made it her own. We start out by meeting Amy who is not living a good life and has such a sorry excuse for a mom that I couldn’t stand her and was waiting on something good to happen for Amy. Well Amy gets tossed into the world of Oz and she learns that it may not be anything like the movies and books she has read. Oh where do I begin as the world building the author created was amazing. She gave me such a visual experience I was creeped out about the fact that it was not a world of sunshine and rainbows like I have always pictured it to be.
I think my favorite thing about this book was the fact that along the way Amy gets to meet such unique characters and she learns that good may not really be all that good and wicked may not be as wicked as it seems. I loved that this book showed all sides of people and the person that was so different from the norm was Dorothy. The sweet innocent girl from Kansas has now become a power hungry girl that will stop at nothing to get what she wants and she enlists the help of other well known characters to get it. We get to meet the Tin man, The Lion and of course the Scarecrow who were so creepy but yet such cool characters. They were basically Oz’s enforcers and not friendly people at all. Amy soon meets some people that put her on a path to take down Dorothy but she quickly learns it may not be as easy as she thought it would be.
This book is full of lots of moments that leave you with tons of questions and that makes you want to know more. The author created great characters and made me want to know more about them because I could tell they were flawed creatures that have been through a lot. I think the one that I wished this book did was tell us what made them all this way as I am sure there was something that happened to create this world. I personally can’t wait for the next book in this series to see what happens next with Amy and Dorothy.I highly recommend this one to others.
I think my favorite thing about this book was the fact that along the way Amy gets to meet such unique characters and she learns that good may not really be all that good and wicked may not be as wicked as it seems. I loved that this book showed all sides of people and the person that was so different from the norm was Dorothy. The sweet innocent girl from Kansas has now become a power hungry girl that will stop at nothing to get what she wants and she enlists the help of other well known characters to get it. We get to meet the Tin man, The Lion and of course the Scarecrow who were so creepy but yet such cool characters. They were basically Oz’s enforcers and not friendly people at all. Amy soon meets some people that put her on a path to take down Dorothy but she quickly learns it may not be as easy as she thought it would be.
This book is full of lots of moments that leave you with tons of questions and that makes you want to know more. The author created great characters and made me want to know more about them because I could tell they were flawed creatures that have been through a lot. I think the one that I wished this book did was tell us what made them all this way as I am sure there was something that happened to create this world. I personally can’t wait for the next book in this series to see what happens next with Amy and Dorothy.I highly recommend this one to others.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
anne paschke
I bought this book on a whim. I thoroughly enjoyed it. Amy is just the right kind of anti-herione and the supporting characters are just as atypical as well. A very interesting variation on the Oz books. I'm ready for book two!
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
linda margaret
I bought this book on a whim. I thoroughly enjoyed it. Amy is just the right kind of anti-herione and the supporting characters are just as atypical as well. A very interesting variation on the Oz books. I'm ready for book two!
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
amir hossein fassihi
It was sooooooo good! I'm speechless! Think I have found my new favorite series! I loved the Wizard of Oz as a kid; I was obsessed. This creative and exciting twist on the timeless classic is phenomenal. A+
★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆
brook stargazer
Really cool concept. The book was fast paced and very easy reading, perhaps a bit too easy. I mean it's an adult twist of a much loved classic so the author could have made more detailed and given the characters a little more depth. All in all a decent read although not sure if I'll go on to read the whole series.
★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆
wasan makhlouf
The author really had my attention during the fight sequences. When I first started the book I had planned to read it to my 10 year old grandson. I have changed my mind as this is a story for adults. I enjoyed it.
★ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆
jarod
While the idea here was intriguing, it felt like it was written by a high schooler and ultimately there were too many things that just conveniently happened and I didn't care about any of the characters by the end of the book.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
cari
Amazing book I love how it catches your attention early on and refuses to let it go throughout the chapters. This book takes a well known story and twists it into something better at least for my taste. In love with this book can't wait to get the others.
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
sonechka
This book, while targeted at young adults is vibrant and full of magical fantasy. A solid start to a series, Dorothy Must Die is recommended for anyone who enjoys fantasy, and for those who enjoyed the Harry Potter books.
★ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆
ken ichi
I was really looking forward to reading this; the idea of an evil Dorothy was intriguing! Unfortunately the book itself is really disappointing - I stopped reading after chapter 6. All of the characters seemed so fake and one dimensional that I couldn't believe any of it. Indigo was especially annoying, her constant cursing was unnecessary and distracting.
★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆
josh anderson
I didn't have many expectations for this book since it can get so much love and just enough hate. I like the characters and the plot is a bit interesting but I will wait to see where it goes before saying more
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
lisa ringbloom
Amazing book I love how she cleverly put her mission on the end of the bookjacket I love how they twisted it and explain everything and I loved amy and nox both were puzzling characters. I loved how they didnt make OZ this farytale oh everything is great thing. I loved it and I think some haters just dont get the literature in it and the way its about the girl from kansas who seemed normal but just wasnt. Back of haters this book is awesome!
Please RateDorothy Must Die