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

4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars | 6,988 ratings

Price: 22.57

Last update: 12-22-2024


About this item

Heralded as an instant classic of fantasy literature, Maguire has written a wonderfully imaginative retelling of The Wizard of Oz told from the Wicked Witch's point of view. More than just a fairy tale for adults, Wicked is a meditation on the nature of good and evil.

Elphaba is born with green skin, a precocious mind, and a talent for magic. An outcast throughout her childhood in Munchkinland, she finally begins to feel as though she fits in when she enters the University in the Emerald City. While she hones her skills, she discovers that Oz isn't the Utopia it seems. She sets out to protect its unwanted creatures, becoming known as the Wicked Witch along the way.

Narrator John McDonough draws you in to Maguire's magical world of witches and talking animals, making it possible to believe in a land somewhere over the rainbow.


Top reviews from the United States

C. Aleo
5.0 out of 5 stars You'll never look at blue gingham the same way again
Reviewed in the United States on November 23, 2015
I was introduced to the music of the Broadway musical Wicked not that long ago, and was immediately intrigued with the idea of the Wicked Witch of the West not being as evil as she was made out to be in The Wizard of Oz. What if it was the Wizard who was the evil one? The idea of turning such a revered story on its head was too much to resist, and I was pleasantly surprised when my friend starbreiz sent me some items from my Amazon wishlist, including Wicked by Gregory Maguire.

::: There Is Always More to the Story :::

Gregory Maguire's first novel turned one of the most established legends of our time on its ear with its premise: what if the Wicked Witch of the West from The Wizard of Oz wasn't so wicked after all, but was actually viewed that way based only on perception? The story surrounds the life of Elphaba, the daughter of a minister and a woman who wasn't the most faithful minister's wife ever. Her unfortunate tale begins with her birth, when she is born with green skin, teeth so sharp she bites her own skin, and an aversion to water. Her mother turns to herbal drugs, and her missionary father believes that Elphaba's condition is somehow his fault. The only stable figure is really Elphaba's mother's former nanny, who comes to take care of the little green girl.

Elphaba's childhood is defined by her father's missionary work in Quadling country, the poorest section of Oz, and a far cry from the upper class of Munchinland to which her mother was born.

Maguire picks up the story when Elphaba is older, and a new student at Shiz, the university of Oz. The university is divided into all-male and all-female colleges, and Elphaba ends up rooming with the very snobby Galinda, much to Galinda's dismay. Elphaba quickly becomes suspicious of the headmistress, Madame Morrible, and after an Animal (the walking, talking, intelligent versions, much like the Cowardly Lion) professor dies under mysterious circumstances, Elphaba finagles an audience with the Wizard for herself and Galinda, where she quickly realizes that the Wizard is not the paternalistic ruler he was believed to be.

Elphaba sends Galinda back to Shiz and begins a life of resistance, first on behalf of the Animals, then with a life in a convent (or mauntery, as they call it), and finally ends up in the land of the Vinkus, where she creates her famed winged monkeys, begins to dabble in sorcery, and her story intersects with the story of Dorothy that we all grew up with.

::: Politics, Social Classes, Despots... Just Like Real Life :::

Trying to sum up the various plots in Wicked is impossible, and I feel impotent even attempting it. Maguire has created an incredible character and the book will leave you unable to watch the movie the same way again. Not only has he created a rich and sympathetic character in Elphaba, but he has also created a world that seems so real that every time I had to put the book down to do something else I felt as if I was being jolted from one world to another.

While at times it might seem as if Maguire is leaving too much out, jumping as he does from one period in Elphaba's life to another, he has chosen the most significant points to focus on; each set of experiences is one that would have shaped the woman who became known as the Wicked Witch of the West.

The hardest part of reading Wicked is knowing how it is going to end. From the start, you know that Elphaba is doomed; that she will die at Dorothy's hand, and nothing will change that. Still, even knowing this, you find yourself hoping against hope that Maguire will change the story and find a loophole for Elphaba, that she won't truly die, but live on, fighting the corrupt Wizard and everything he has created.

::: This Isn't Broadway :::

For those introduced to the softer side of Elphaba through the Broadway show of the same name, the novel will probably be a huge surprise. "Based on" is the operative phrase in the description of the musical, which has a far simpler plot than the novel. It would have been impossible to condense all the political intrigue and vast cast of characters in the novel into a musical, and many of the plot devices were oversimplified, including the love affair between Elphaba and Fiyero. The Boq of the novel is, in fact, a Munchinlander who had a crush on Galinda/Glinda, but he plays a far more important role in helping Elphaba in her research for Doctor Dillamond, and later, in helping Dorothy. While I love the show, the book has a much greater depth than the musical, and requires more of the reader than the audience member.

Wicked is one of the best novels I've read in a long, long time. I find myself reading it over again, still hoping that Elphaba can be saved, and still getting lost in the world of Oz as Maguire sees it. This is a book not to be missed, and I guarantee that you'll never view blue gingham and ruby slippers the same way again.
Kara Windsor
5.0 out of 5 stars More than I could have anticipated !
Reviewed in the United States on November 24, 2024
I decided to read this because of my love for the broadway musical. This story, however, goes so indepth and creates an entire world full of it's own religion, politics, and fantastical beliefs. It puts you in the story, and goes much darker than the musical. I could read this over and over again.
Amazon Customer
4.0 out of 5 stars Compelling Plot & Characters, Thought Provoking Topics, Expansive Vocab - Imaginary World Sometimes Unclear
Reviewed in the United States on January 24, 2007
In Maguire's Wicked the reader is transported to the magical land of Oz, in the time before the Witch was born. In the first section, "Munchkinlanders," the story jumps through time from before The Witch is born to about the time she goes off to school. It takes a few chapters to get into the story because of the jumping through time. But by the time you reach the second section, "Gillikin," you will be surely caught up in the story.

Maguire has done an impressive job of creating histories for every aspect of the Oz, The Witch of the West, Glinda, the Wizard, and other characters from Frank L. Baum's Oz series. He even moves through time to explain how the ruby slippers, the Witch's broom, and other inanimate objects came to be. More impressive than the histories themselves is how he artfully weaves these back stories into one comprehensive plot.

Maguire has an astounding vocabulary, one that more than once prompted me to look up a word in the dictionary. I would have looked up many more if I could have gotten myself into the habit of keeping the dictionary side by side with this book, because too often once I settled in to a good read, I wouldn't get up for the dictionary even though I wanted to look up a word or five.

However, there are also a lot of imagined political, religious, and social groups in the Oz of Wicked, with lots of words that go along with them. The vocabulary become overwhelming and even annoying when I couldn't identify if I was reading a real English word that I wasn't familiar with, or a word from Oz. At times I felt like I needed not only an English dictionary by my side, but an Ozian one as well.

Many aspects of the magical world remind me other fantasy tales. Especially because so much of the story takes place at the magical boarding school "Shiz," the story often recalls such other books at the Harry Potter series or His Dark Materials Trilogy. After the students leave the school, though, the story becomes much more grown up and addresses grown up themes as well, including sexual content.

There are many more thought provoking themes as well. Wicked brings up many political and social topics, like racism (and speciesism) and also immigration, tyranny, and nationalism. The question of good and evil, where they come from and how they are to be dealt with is addressed throughout the book. Questioning of political and religious authority is also rampant, though no clear conclusion is ever drawn. This open-endedness allows (or forces) the reader to come to her own conclusions, or at the very least to continue contemplating the questions well after the plot is finished. The only thing in this regard that the characters seem to agree on is that a "holier than thou" attitude is one to beware.

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