Finding Dorothy: A Novel
Finding Dorothy: A Novel book cover

Finding Dorothy: A Novel

Hardcover – February 12, 2019

Price
$19.95
Format
Hardcover
Pages
368
Publisher
Ballantine Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0525622109
Dimensions
6.4 x 1.2 x 9.6 inches
Weight
1.3 pounds

Description

“A breathtaking read that will transport you over the rainbow and into the heart of one of America’s most enduring fairy tales and the hardscrabble life that inspired it. Gripping, fascinating, Finding Dorothy is a novel for anyone who ever stared in awe as Oz came to life onscreen, and wondered what other secrets lay hidden behind the curtain. A dream of a book you’ll want to savor and share!” —Lisa Wingate, author of Before We Were Yours “In some ways reminiscent of Jerry Stahl’s excellent I, Fatty ,xa0Letts’ Finding Dorothy combines exhaustive research with expansive imagination, blending history and speculation intoxa0a seamless tapestry. . . .xa0It’s a testament to Letts’ skill that she can capture on the page, without benefit of audio, that same emotion we have all felt sometime over the last 80 years while listening to ‘Over the Rainbow.’” — BookPage (starred review) “Old Hollywood is its own kind of Oz in Finding Dorothy, complete with false dazzle and complex combinations of threat and allure. But what really satisfies here is the unlikely friendship between L. Frank Baum’s unsinkable widow, Maud, and the young Judy Garland, on the vulnerable cusp of fame. It’s an alliance that seems touched with magic and serendipity and something even more transformative, true understanding between women.” —Paula McLain, author of Love and Ruin “Beautifully researched and written, Finding Dorothy pulls back the curtain on a fascinating relationship behind the making of The Wizard of Oz .” —Martha Hall Kelly, author of Lilac Girls “A woman with a heart, a brain, courage to spare, and a girl’s sense of wonder—this is the heroine of Elizabeth Letts’s sparkling, touching novel.xa0Maud Baum is the daughter of a suffragette and the wife of a dreamer, but she is also a force to be reckoned with in her own right.” —Melanie Benjamin, author of The Swans of Fifth Avenue “Readers looking for an inspiring true story will be delighted. . . . [Letts] again crafts a tale of fortitude and triumph over adversity. . . .xa0Fans of the Oz novels or film will be enchanted.xa0This isxa0a great fit for readers of Christina Baker Kline and Lisa Wingate, and will surely be a popular choice for book clubs. . . .xa0[A] well-researched novelization.” — Library Journal “Maud [Gage Baum] is a fascinating character, and this isxa0a poignant, absorbing tale of the life and love story that led to the creation of a beloved classic.” — Booklist “Historical fiction fans will rejoice. With meticulous research and vivid detail, Elizabeth Letts explores both Maud’s life story leading up to the writing of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, and her determination to see that the film remained true to her husband’s vision as it was made in 1930’s Hollywood. Letts takes readers on an unflinching journey between hardship and hope, with a catch-your-breath ending.” —Pam Jenoff, author of The Orphan’s Tale “More than just a behind-the-scenes pee at the making of The Wizard of Oz, Finding Dorothy is a heartfelt look at the origins of a beloved story told, through the eyes of the woman closest to its creator. From capturing the pioneering spirit of a family settling out West to the fight for women’s suffrage, and the vulnerability of a young Judy Garland on the threshold of stardom, Finding Dorothy is filled with pitch-perfect wonderment.” —Renée Rosen, author of White Collar Girl Elizabeth Letts is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Eighty-Dollar Champion and The Perfect Horse , which won the 2017 PEN Center USA Literary Award for research nonfiction, as well as two previous novels, Quality of Care and Family Planning . A former certified nurse-midwife, she also served in the Peace Corps in Morocco. She lives in Southern California and Northern Michigan. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter 1HollywoodOctober 1938It was a city within a city, a textile mill to weave the gossamer of fantasy on looping looms of celluloid. From the flashing needles of the tailors in the costume shop to the zoo where the animals were trained, from the matzo ball soup in the commissary to the blinding-xadwhite offices in the brand-xadnew Thalberg executive building, an army of people—xadcomposers and musicians, technicians and tinsmiths, directors and actors—xadspun thread into gold. Once upon a time, dreams were made by hand, but now they were mass-xadproduced. These forty-xadfour acres were their assembly line.Outside its walls, the brown hills, tidy neighborhoods, and rusting oil derricks of Culver City gave no hint of magic; but within the gates of M-xadG-xadM—xadMetro, as it was known—xadyou stepped inside an enchanted kingdom. A private trolley line that cut through the center of the studio’s back lots could whisk you across the world, or back in time—xadfrom old New York’s Brownstone Row to the Wild West’s Billy the Kid Street to Renaissance Italy’s Verona Square—xadwith no stops in the outside world. In 1938, more than three thousand people labored inside these walls. Just as the Emerald City was the center of the Land of Oz, so the M-xadG-xadM Studios were the beating heart of that mythic place called Hollywood.Maud Baum had been waiting on foot outside the massive front gates of Metro-xadGoldwyn-xadMayer for almost an hour, just another face among the throngs of visitors hoping for a chance to get inside. Every now and again, a gleaming automobile pulled up to the gate. Each time, the studio’s guard snapped to attention and offered a crisp salute. Whenever this happened, the fans waiting around the entrance, hoping to catch a peek of the stars, would leap forward, thrusting bits of papers through the car’s windows. As Maud observed this spectacle, she couldn’t help but feel a pang for Frank: his doomed Oz Manufacturing Film Company, a single giant barnlike structure, had been just a short distance away from the current location of this thriving metropolis of Metro. In 1914, when Frank had opened his company, Hollywood had been a sleepy backwater of orange trees and bungalows, and filmmaking a crazy venture seen as a passing fad. If only he could have lived to see what a movie studio would become over the course of the next two decades: another White City, a giant theater stage. This fantastical place was the concrete manifestation of what Frank had been able to imagine long before it had come to pass.At last it was Maud’s turn. As the guard scribbled her a pass, her stomach fluttered. Inside her purse, she had the small cutout torn from Variety. She didn’t need to look at it; she had long since memorized its few words: “oz” sold to louis b. mayer at m-xadg-xadm. As the last living link to the inspiration behind the story, she was determined to offer her services as a consultant. But getting access to the studio had not been easy. For months, they had rebuffed her calls, only reluctantly setting up a meeting with the studio head, Louis B. Mayer, because the receptionist was no doubt fed up with answering her daily queries. Today she would make her case.If Maud’s suffragist mother, Matilda, had taught her anything, it was that if you wanted something, you needed to ask for it—xador demand it, if necessary. True, Maud would far rather be reading a book at Ozcot, her Hollywood home, but she had made a promise to her late husband that she aimed to keep.The guard pushed her day pass through the glass-xadfronted window and gave her a nod.“Where is the Thalberg Building?” she asked.He jerked his head to the left—xada gesture that could have pointed anywhere. “White Lung? Just head that way. You can’t miss it.”White Lung? What a peculiar name for a building. Maud was about to ask him why, but as she’d aged she’d learned to keep her thoughts to herself so as not to come off as a doddering old fool.Inside the studio’s gates, the paths and private roads were crowded with people and vehicles. A knot of actors hurried by, costumed in elaborate ball gowns, paste jewels, and powdered wigs, followed by painters in splattered coveralls, a man humming a tune to himself, and another fellow, likely a writer, with a furrowed brow and a pencil tucked behind his ear. Maud leapt out of the way as three girls whizzed past on bicycles. Having spent much time in the theater, she was reminded of the bustle of backstage, but this—xadthis was such an immense scale—xadall the world’s a stage! Frank had loved to quote Shakespeare. Here, it seemed to be literally true.The Art Moderne Thalberg Building was dazzlingly white, its fresh exterior paint as clean as snow. A few scaffoldings still crept up one side—xadthe building was clearly brand-xadnew. When she stepped inside the polished lobby, she felt a chill prickle her skin and heard an odd wheezing sound like an old man breathing. She pulled her cardigan tighter around her shoulders as the receptionist gave her a sympathetic look.“It’s the air conditioner,” she said. “Like a heater for cool.”Maud suppressed a smile. Such a Frank-xadlike idea. A heater for cool. He was always saying backward things like that.“May I help you?”“I am here to see Mr. Louis B. Mayer.” Maud made sure that her voice conveyed no hint of hesitation. She who hesitates is lost. That was another of Matilda’s expressions. Seventy-xadseven years old and Maud sometimes still felt as if her mother were perched just behind the wings, whispering stage instructions.The receptionist was a young woman with a well-xadcoiffed platinum bob. “Actress?” she asked.“Most definitely not.”The girl raised a stylishly penciled eyebrow and gave Maud the once-xadover, from her gray curls down to her sturdy brown pumps.“Are youxa0.u2008.u2008.u2008?” She leaned in. “His mother?”To her credit, Maud did not show her irritation. “Mrs. L. Frank Baum. I have an appointment.”The young woman narrowed her eyes, the rubber tip of her pencil ticking down the list. “I’m sorry, Mrs. Baum. You aren’t on Mr. Mayer’s schedule.”“Check again,” Maud insisted. “One o’clock. I made this appointment weeks ago.” She wouldn’t let them turn her away now. She’d been waiting too long for this day to arrive.“You’ll have to speak to Mrs. Kovermanxa0.u2008.u2008.” She dropped her voice. “Mount Ida. No one gets to Mr. Mayer without going through her first.”Maud smiled. “I’m quite adept at going through people.”“Take the elevator to the third floor. Mrs. Koverman’s desk will be right in front of you.”As Maud waited for the elevator, her blurry reflection looked back at her from the shining brass of the twin doors. She hoped that her expression reflected a resoluteness of spirit, rather than the trepidation she was now feeling as this important meeting was at last upon her.“Third floor,” she said to the uniformed elevator man, stepping inside.When the doors slid open, she faced a secretary’s desk with a plaque that read mrs. ida koverman. A stout matron with bobbed brown hair inspected Maud.“Maud Baum,” Maud said. “I have an appointment with Mr. Louis B. Mayer.”“On what business?”“My late husbandxa0.u2008.u2008.” Maud was horrified to hear her voice squeak.Mrs. Koverman looked at her with no trace of sympathy.“My late husband, Mr. L. Frank Baum, was the author of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz.”Mrs. Koverman’s expression did not soften.Maud had long since noted that there were two kinds of people in the world: fans of Oz—xadthose who remembered their childhoods—xadand those who pretended that they had never even heard of Oz, who believed that adults should put away childish things. From the look on her face, Mrs. Koverman fell into the latter category.“Have a seat.” She cut off any further conversation with a vigorous clacking of her typewriter keys.Maud sat, feet crossed at the ankle, handbag and a well-xadworn copy of Oz balanced on her lap, hoping to convey that she wasn’t planning on going anywhere.Every now and again, Mrs. Koverman would stand up and rap upon the door with the brass plaque on it reading louis b. mayer, then enter with a piece of typed paper or a phone message. Each time she emerged, Maud looked at her steadily while Mrs. Koverman avoided her gaze. Once in a while, Maud glanced at her wristwatch. Soon one-xadthirty had come and gone.The two women might have remained in their silent test of wills had not a large commotion ensued from the elevator bay—xada loud thwack and a cry of “Bugger all!” filled the room. Maud was astonished to see a giant young man—xadwell over six feet tall—xadrubbing his head, then bending over to gather up a scattered pile of papers from the floor. Most surprising, a brand-xadnew edition of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz had skidded across the floor, landing almost at Maud’s feet.She picked it up and approached the man. “I believe you’ve lost this?”“Right,” he said with a British accent. “Just give me a minute. I’m a bit dazed.”Maud watched with alarm as the lanky man swayed like a tall pine on a windy day. But after a moment, he straightened his tie, took the book from Maud, and held out his other hand in greeting. “Noel Langley. Scenarist.”He noted the faded clothbound volume Maud held in her other hand. “Doing a little homework, I see.”“Homework?”“Let me guess. Are you playing Auntie Em?”“Auntie Em?” Maud was startled. She peered at the man, confused. “But how could youxa0.u2008.u2008.u2008?”“Clara Blandick,” Langley continued, not seeming to notice Maud’s reaction. “I presumexa0.u2008.u2008.”“Oh, the actress?” Maud said, gathering her wits. “You mean the actress?”“Yes, the actress,” Langley said, louder this time. Maud blinked in irritation.“Not at all. I’m not an actress,” Maud said firmly. “I’m Maud Baum—xadMrs. L. Frankxa0.u2008.u2008.u2008?”Langley returned a blank look.“My late husband, Frank—xadL. Frank Baum? Author of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz?” Maud held up her book and pointed to the author’s name.Still looking puzzled, he scrutinized Maud as if seeing her for the first time. She twisted the emerald she wore on her fourth finger and smoothed the folds of her simple floral dress, aware how out of place she must appear to this elegant young man.“But the book was written before I was bornxa0.u2008.u2008.” Langley said slowly, as if trying to solve a difficult math problem in his head. “Surely his wife must bexa0.u2008.u2008.” As he spoke, his head cocked progressively more to one side, until with his long limbs and small tilted head, he looked like a curious grasshopper.“I’m seventy-xadseven years old,” Maud said. “Not dead yet, if that’s what you were thinking.”“Certainly not, of course not,” Langley stammered, his face now beet red. “It’s just that I imagined the book was published years ago? I guess, I assumed—xadoh, never mind what I assumedxa0.u2008.u2008.”“Not to worry,” Maud said soothingly. “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz was published in 1900. The turn of the century.”“Ah, yesxa0.u2008.u2008.” Langley said. His blush had faded, but the tips of his auricles remained pink.“Must seem like ancient history to a young man like you.” Maud’s heart sank at the thought.Langley nodded in agreement.“Which brings up a good point,” Maud said. “It’s a lucky chance I’ve run into you. You see—xad”Before Maud had a chance to finish, the elevator doors slid open again and a brown-xadhaired man seemed to blow out as if pushed by a strong wind.“Langley!” he cried out.“Hello,” the tall fellow answered. “Look what we have herexa0.u2008.u2008. if you can believe it. It’s Mrs. L. Frank Baum. Mrs. Baum, this is Mervyn LeRoy. He’s the producer.”LeRoy skidded to a stop in front of the pair and looked Maud up and down.“Well, I’ll be,” he said, appearing mystified at her presence.LeRoy’s gaze fell upon the faded green book Maud clasped in her bony, spotted hands.“Well, now, look at this.” LeRoy reached out. “This looks like the exact same edition I had when I was a kidxa0.u2008.u2008. sat on the shelf right by my bed. Loved that book so much.”Maud sensed an opening. “Would you like to take a look?”She held out the worn volume, the color leached from its cover and its edges frayed. Before cracking it open, LeRoy inhaled its papery scent, then reverently brushed the palm of his hand across the stamped green cloth. Flipping it open, he perused the color illustrations one by one, a half-xadsmile on his lips.“I grew up reading this book. Loved it! It’s hard to explain. I almost felt as if the characters were part of my own family.”“I am glad to hear you feel that way. So you’ll understand why it’s so important to stick to the author’s vision.”LeRoy tore his eyes away from the volume in his hands and returned his gaze to Maud, whose corporeal presence he still seemed to find puzzling. “The author’s vision? Tell the truth, I never gave a moment’s thought to the person who wrote it. Oz always seemed so timeless—xadeternal, really. Funny to think it started out as the idea of an unknown person with a pen in his hand.” Read more

Features & Highlights

  • This richly imagined novel tells the story behind
  • The Wonderful Wizard of Oz
  • , the book that inspired the iconic film, through the eyes of author L. Frank Baum’s intrepid wife, Maud.
  • “A breathtaking read that will transport you over the rainbow and into the heart of one of America’s most enduring fairy tales.”—Lisa Wingate, author of
  • Before We Were Yours
  • Hollywood, 1938: As soon as she learns that M-G-M is adapting her late husband’s masterpiece for the screen, seventy-seven-year-old Maud Gage Baum sets about trying to finagle her way onto the set. Nineteen years after Frank’s passing, Maud is the only person who can help the producers stay true to the spirit of the book—because she’s the only one left who knows its secrets. But the moment she hears Judy Garland rehearsing the first notes of “Over the Rainbow,” Maud recognizes the yearning that defined her own life story, from her youth as a suffragette’s daughter to her coming of age as one of the first women in the Ivy League, from her blossoming romance with Frank to the hardscrabble prairie years that inspired
  • The Wonderful Wizard of Oz
  • . Judy reminds Maud of a young girl she cared for and tried to help in South Dakota, a dreamer who never got her happy ending. Now, with the young actress under pressure from the studio as well as her ambitious stage mother, Maud resolves to protect her—the way she tried so hard to protect the real Dorothy. The author of two
  • New York Times
  • bestselling nonfiction books
  • , The Eighty-Dollar Champion
  • and
  • The Perfect Horse
  • , Elizabeth Letts is a master at discovering and researching a rich historical story and transforming it into a page-turner.
  • Finding Dorothy
  • is the result of Letts’s journey into the amazing lives of Frank and Maud Baum. Written as fiction but based closely on the truth, Elizabeth Letts’s new book tells a story of love, loss, inspiration, and perseverance, set in America’s heartland.
  • Praise for
  • Finding Dorothy
  • “In some ways reminiscent of Jerry Stahl’s excellent
  • I, Fatty
  • , Letts’
  • Finding Dorothy
  • combines exhaustive research with expansive imagination, blending history and speculation into a seamless tapestry. . . . It’s a testament to Letts’ skill that she can capture on the page, without benefit of audio, that same emotion we have all felt sometime over the last 80 years while listening to ‘Over the Rainbow.’”
  • BookPage
  • (starred review)

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(2.2K)
★★★★
25%
(934)
★★★
15%
(560)
★★
7%
(261)
-7%
(-261)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

Good Story

I have given this book a 5, really the story should have been Finding Maude, I loved the story when the author was telling Maude's story, for me it lacked info on the Judy Garland story. There were little tidbits, and yes she did try & watch over Judy, but it was Maude's story that was the best part of the book. I know one reviewer said she didn't like Maude, I found her quite interesting. I didn't know anything about Maude Baum, until this book. I didn't know her Mother was one of the woman's advocates, I know of Susan B Anthony, and Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Its too bad Matilda Gage's story got lost over time, with this book it brings her story to the fore front. It was interesting the author's take on the symbolisms of the Wizard of Oa, I agreed with a lot of it, gives a whole new meaning to the movie. I am so glad the song Over the Rainbow wasn't taken out of the movie, another lost tidbit, how Maude fought to keep the song in. Frank was such a dreamer, in most marriages, the wife would have left. He had such a vision, and there were times that Maude got frustrated with him, but they both complimented each other in their marriage.
60 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

The Woman Behind the Curtain

If you’re like me and fascinated with the story behind the story of The Wizard of Oz you’ll surely find this book fascinating. It’s about the widow of Frank Baum, Maud. She started life as a feisty tomboy, daughter of a suffragette and remained feisty her whole life. The book starts with Maud’s pleas to MGM studios to allow her to help keep her husband’s vision of the story going unheeded. In her suffragette mind set she sets up an appointment with Louis B Mayer and confronts him personally.

The book then reverses chronology and tells the wonderful story of her childhood, her entrance into Cornell and her meeting her future husband Frank through a college friend. At the time Frank was an actor and not much of a breadwinner. The couple has four sons and as the tale unfolds it tells of their life as Frank pursues a writing career. You will see portions of Baum’s famous tale as the story unfolds in their real life.

The real reason for reading this book, though, is the insight the author shares about the actual filming of the movie. It describes how Maud tried to protect Judy Garland from her overbearing stage mother. It describes how Garland was given speed to keep her weight in check. Was Maud really that involved with the filming? I don’t know but it makes a good story. We do know that she was influential in keeping the song “Somewhere over the Rainbow” in the film by persuading LB Mayer personally after it was to be cut. She did attend the premier. The rest may be true or it may be darn good fiction.
19 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

A most fascinating and delightful story...

I was 3/4 intothis book when it went missing. I think it was misplaced by one of my grandchildren, who have no restrictions at my home. I am still looking for it but I thought I would write what I have read so far.
Not too big a fan of Wizard of Oz movie, but I stand alone. Loved the talented Judy. I really don't know why I purchased it, but I was looking for a light read, (one that did not have WW1 or WW2 in it. ) This was light enough, but detailed, thorough and delightful. The book really takes you back in time. An unusual family and marriage. I will keep looking into every corner of this house, I am intent on getting to the end.......
14 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Keep an open mind and enjoy the journey.

As much as I loved the idea of this novel, I was at times frustrated with the reading level (grade school). However, as I neared the end, I realized that this book has a lot of potential for History and English classrooms, including term papers on several subjects. In the end, I believe the reading level is appropriate to reach the large audience of Wizard of Oz fans. A four star read for me, but likely a five star read for many others. I enjoyed it and recommend it for all who have grown up with the Wizard of Oz.
13 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Disappointed

I loved the book, I love the movie, and I wanted so very much to revisit both though this book. The prose was stilted and the narrative stiff. Perhaps the author should explore writing for secondary grades. When I find I’m confused by the direction a book is going, I ask myself - whose story is this? I think the answer is it’s Maud’s story and frankly, her husband and mother were more interesting. Thank you NetGalley and Ballantine Books for letting me read this prepublication copy. I really wanted to like it.
10 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

I Love This Book Hard!

“Don’t let anybody steal your marbles.”

Maud Gage Baum is one of a kind. The godchild of Susan B. Anthony, child of first-wave feminist Matilda Joslyn Gage and an indulgent, progressively inclined father, she is unhampered by many of the traditional expectations that shackled women born during the American Civil War. But though her parents encourage her to develop her mind and talents, they have little prepared her for the wider world that greets her, and when she arrives at the women’s dormitory at Cornell University, she is considered peculiar by her classmates. She is a lonely young woman, until her roommate sets her up with Frank, an eccentric, clever man whose whimsy equals her own.

My great thanks go to Net Galley and Random House Ballantine for the review copy, which I received free in exchange for this honest review. It will be available to the public tomorrow, February 12, just in time to be wrapped in red paper and given to the bookworm you adore.

Maud’s story comes to us from two different time periods, one of which starts in 1871 during her childhood and moves forward in linear fashion, and the other in 1939, when she comes to the set where The Wizard of Oz is being filmed to fulfill her beloved Frank’s dying wish; he has asked her to look after Dorothy. And though it initially means gaining access to the studio through duplicitous means, Maude befriends the unhappy but massively talented Judy Garland, and advocates for the intention behind her character, sometimes successfully, sometimes not.

I love this book hard. It has an unusual appeal, not a thriller nor a grab-you-by-the-hair page turner, but rather a strangely comforting novel, one that offers us the chance to follow Maud to another time and another place. I read several books at a time, and this one became my bribe to myself, the reward I could look forward to after completing increments of other books that I wouldn’t abandon, yet didn’t love as I did this one.

How many times have I reviewed a book favorably yet with the caveat that it isn’t bedtime reading, and maybe not good for mealtime either? Listen up. This one is good for both. It will make you appreciate your meal as you move through the hungry years of the Depression, and as you read about poor Judy being starved with lettuce and cottage cheese, her penalty for reaching puberty when the studio wanted her to look like a scrawny waif. And at bedtime, even the sorrowful passages are wonderfully hypnotic.

The love story between Maud and Frank is one for the ages, and without Letts, who would have guessed? Midway through the story I felt the need to know how closely the author kept to the truth, and I skipped to the notes at the end. I am delighted to say that this writer did a great deal of research, and she tells the reader specifically where and when she departs from historical fact for the sake of the story. The way that the character of Dorothy is invented, based on a string of actual events from the Baums’ lives, is riveting, and in fact had the author not told us otherwise, I would have assumed that much of it was made up, because it’s almost too cool to be true.

Letts develops her characters subtly, with never a caricature or stereotype. Though her settings are well drawn, this is a character based book if ever I read one, and it must truly have been a labor of love. I’ve read a dozen books between this one and the present, yet this is the title that makes me smile.

This beautifully crafted story is bound to rank high among the year’s best historical novels. Sweet, soothing, and highly recommended.
9 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

L.Frank Baum Advocated For The EXTERMINATION of American Indians

The parts of the book that take place in Hollywood seemed poorly written,but I kept reading it until this.
One of my daughters, a research librarian, sent me a link to an article on NPR. It turns out that L.Frank Baum was an advocate of the extermination of American Indians...a horrible racist. And I was born and raised on a New Mexico Pueblo. The book portrays Baum as such a nice man. What a lie. I usually donate my books to our library but this novel will go in the trash.
7 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

For fans of Historical Fiction and the Wizard of Oz

Lovely historical fiction title featuring the wife of L. Frank Baum, author of the Wizard of Oz. The novel parallels story lines of Maud Gage Baum's life with Frank Baum from their meeting until the publication of his first novel with the time of the filming of the movie version. Maud is concerned about the casting of Judy Garland as Dorothy, seeing her as too old for the role, but eventually is concerned for Judy herself, as the young woman is used and abused by the Hollywood 'system.' Throughout the novel, we learn the trials of the Baum's life through meeting in upstate NY, to moving to the Dakota territory, to settling in Chicago for a time. Other central characters include Maud's family, including her mother, a renowned suffragette and women's rights activist, and her older sister, so different from herself. The two story lines mirror and blend together nicely, and the writing is lovely. Recommend for fans of historical fiction, women's stories, and early Hollywood tales. Also for fans of authors such as Paula McClain, Melanie Benjamin and Elizabeth Berg.
5 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Backstory plus Women's Suffrage, What's not to like?

Excellent read for fans of both the book and movie of Wizard of Oz. And old time Hollywood. I enjoyed the characters of both Baums and also appreciated reading about Maud's mother. Solidly recommend!
4 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

so-so

This “historical novel” had a lot of interesting information about the family of Maud Sage who became the wife of L. Frank Baum, writer of “The Wizard of Oz” and the follow up books.

The reason I’m putting historical novel in quotes is that it seemed to me that the author was trying to make a story based on actual history, but simply didn’t have enough facts. Or maybe the actual facts didn’t support her premise. Or maybe she was goaded into pushing current agendas of her own or of the publisher. In reading the book I went back and forth between enjoying it and being annoyed by the obvious fictional intrusions.

Also, it was difficult to decide the actual purpose of the book. Who was the central character? Not Frank. Not Dorothy (nor Judy Garland). Not his wife, Maud, although she was closer than anyone else. It was a jumbled up mishmash of real or imaged or contrived (those were the worst) scenes.

I’m giving this 3 stars (rounded up from 2.5) as I guess I enjoyed ½ of it. It’s not bad, it’s just frustrating.

I received this ARC from NetGalley and the publisher, Random House/Ballentine, in exchange for an honest review.
4 people found this helpful