Speedy in Oz explained

Ojo in Oz
Author:Ruth Plumly Thompson
Illustrator:John R. Neill
Country:United States
Language:English
Series:The Oz Books
Genre:Children's novel
Publisher:Reilly & Lee
Pub Date:1934
Media Type:Print (Hardcover)
Pages:298
Preceded By:Ojo in Oz
Followed By:The Wishing Horse of Oz

Speedy in Oz (1934) is the twenty-eighth book in the Oz series created by L. Frank Baum and his successors, and the fourteenth written by Ruth Plumly Thompson.[1] It was illustrated by John R. Neill. The novel was followed by The Wishing Horse of Oz (1935).

This book features yet another island which floats in the sky: Umbrella Island, which flies by virtue of a huge umbrella with lifting and shielding powers. The king is not very good at steering the flying island; he bumps it into a giant's head. For compensation, Loxo, the great brute, demands the King's daughter Gureeda, whom he mistakes for a boy, as a servant to lace his huge boots. However, he grants the Umbrella Islanders three months to train the child to be a bootlacer.

Meanwhile, the boy Speedy (from The Yellow Knight of Oz) returns for another adventure. While inspecting a dinosaur skeleton, Speedy is blown by a geyser into the air. The skeleton comes magically to life and becomes Terrybubble, a live dinosaur skeleton. Terrybubble and Speedy land on Umbrella Island. Speedy develops a friendship with Princess Gureeda. He also becomes friendly with the island's resident wizard, Waddy. An unscrupulous minister, however, notices that Speedy and Gureeda look very much alike and could pass for fraternal twins.[2] He hatches a plot to compensate the giant by handing Speedy over to him as a slave instead of Gureeda. Terrybubble learns of this plot, and he parachutes off the island with Speedy and Gureeda. All three are captured by Loxo, and it is up to the wizard Waddy to save them.

Aside from a brief consultation with Princess Ozma and her advisers at the conclusion, the book deals exclusively with characters of Thompson's creation.[3]

Reception

The Billings Gazette said that the book offers "rollicking fun and quaking amazement for the under 12s," lauding it as a "book of glorified nonsense".[4] The Boston Globe called it an "entrancing story".[5]

Copyright status

Under current United States copyright laws, Speedy in Oz is scheduled to enter the public domain on January 1, 2030. All of Thompson's subsequent Oz books for Reilly had their copyrights expire prematurely, thus this will be the last copyright in the series to lapse.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Simpson . Paul . A Brief Guide to Oz . 2013 . Constable & Robinson Ltd . 978-1-47210-988-0 . 55 . 10 February 2024.
  2. [Jack Snow (writer)|Jack Snow]
  3. Book: Hearn . Michael Patrick . Cech . John . Dictionary of Literary Biography, vol 22: American Writers for Children, 1900-1960 . 1983 . Gale Research Company . 0-8103-1146-1 . 312 . 20 May 2024 . Ruth Plumly Thompson.
  4. News: Looking Bookward . 23 February 2024 . Billings Gazette . May 20, 1934 . 18.
  5. News: Latest Books . 23 February 2024 . Boston Globe . June 23, 1934 . 15.