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Michel Laporte

Autor(a) de The Magic of Oz

43+ Works 1,371 Membros 21 Reviews

Obras de Michel Laporte

The Magic of Oz (1919) 1,288 cópias
12 récits de l'Enéide (2010) 5 cópias
Dodici storie di fate (2007) 4 cópias
Les six filles du dragon (2010) 2 cópias
Contes des mille et une nuits (2006) 1 exemplar(es)
Bécassine fait des bêtises (2010) 1 exemplar(es)
Contes des mille et une nuits (2019) 1 exemplar(es)
12 récits de L'Énéide (2019) 1 exemplar(es)
SEPT MERVEILLES DU MONDE (LES) (2006) 1 exemplar(es)
L'éléphant blanc de Charlemagne (2012) 1 exemplar(es)
La Reine Soleil (2007) 1 exemplar(es)
Le commodore 1 exemplar(es)
Investigate with Prune and Prosper (1988) 1 exemplar(es)
L'Homme Au Bras Coupe (1992) 1 exemplar(es)
Belphégor : L'Oeil du dragon (2002) 1 exemplar(es)
12 historias y leyendas de Roma (2010) 1 exemplar(es)

Associated Works

Northanger Abbey (1817) — Tradutor, algumas edições21,616 cópias

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Nome padrão
Laporte, Michel
Data de nascimento
1950
Sexo
male
Nacionalidade
France
País (para mapa)
France
Local de nascimento
Rodez, Aveyron, France
Ocupação
Author
Pequena biografia
Parce qu’il lisait passionnément quand il était jeune, Michel Laporte a décidé à son tour d’écrire des livres pour la jeunesse.
S’il a surtout publié des polars et des romans historiques, allant parfois jusqu’à mêler les deux genres, il se passionne aussi pour les mythologies. L’important, à ses yeux, c’est d’aller voir ailleurs, autrefois, autrement, plus loin... et d’en rapporter ce qu’il peut.
Récemment il a publié Le Grand Monde de la mythologie ainsi que 12 histoires d'amour célèbres (Castor Poche n°1061). Il est également l'auteur en Castor Poche des 10 Contes des Mille et Une Nuits (plus de 65 000 exemplaires vendus), de la série des Maître Wen, ainsi que de 12 récits de l'Iliade et l'Odyssée (près de 16 000 exemplaires vendus).
Source : www.livredepochejeunesse.com

Membros

Resenhas

This is the last Oz book L. Frank Baum wrote before he died and Ruth Plumley Thompson wrote another 19 books.
Not absolutely sure, but I think my copy is the original edition.
It's possible someone purchased the entire series in 1919--I purchased 5 antique Oz books at a bookstore, and it turns out some of the first editions have a slightly different name for the publisher (Reilly & Barrow instead of Reilly & Lee), and cover art with a more limited color scheme.
 
Marcado
swigget | outras 10 resenhas | Dec 9, 2023 |
This, the penultimate Oz novel by Baum, I had decent memories of from childhood before reading it aloud to my three-year-old son. These were mostly of the magic word of transformation, Pyrzqxgl, which allows the speaker to transform any person into any thing. Kiki Aru, a Munchkin boy bored from living on dull Mount Munch, discovers the word and uses it to transform himself into an eagle and tour the countries adjacent to Oz; in Ev, he bumps into the old Nome King, Ruggedo, homeless since the events of Tik-Tok of Oz. Ruggedo persuades Kiki to use the magic word to create an army of beasts and help him conquer the Emerald City.

Meanwhile, the members of Ozma's court are looking for presents to get Ozma for her birthday. But what do you get the fairy princess who has everything? Trot, Cap'n Bill, and the Glass Cat travel to get a magic flower that the Glass Cat found on her travels; meanwhile, Dorothy and the Wizard go (along with the Cowardly Lion and the Hungry Tiger) to find some monkeys, because Dorothy's idea is to miniaturize some, train them to dance, and have them jump out of Ozma's birthday cake. (I guess when you live in a utopia, you have to seek what amusement you can.)

These three strands weave in and out of each other. Dorothy and the Wizard get to the Forest of Gugu right as Ruggedo is trying to assemble a beast army; Trot and Cap'n Bill get trapped on the island of the magic flower, and so the Glass Cat comes to ask the Wizard for help. I found it enjoyable to read a chapter at a time: it's nice to hear from Trot, Cap'n Bill, and the Glass Cat again, none of whom have had much to do across the past few books. I always like Cap'n Bill's practicality—he reasons some clever stuff about how to deal with the magic flower—and the flower itself is an interesting threat. I like getting to see the Glass Cat show off her stuff; Baum writes cats so well. The way the transformations are used is clever—there is some fun stuff where all the principal characters end up in weird bodies—and I like the way Kiki and Ruggedo are always trying to figure out how to out-scheme the other.

But when you finish the whole book, it all seems a bit dissatisfying, in that the book promises something more exciting than you actually got. The idea that Ruggedo might raise an army of beasts is an interesting one, but he doesn't really get anywhere with it; the beasts aren't really convinced by his rhetoric,* and the Wizard defeats them almost accidentally, and kind of anticlimactically. One kind of wishes the three plots converged in a way that made everything explode, rather than a way where they all kind of neutralize each other. The Cowardly Lion and the Hungry Tiger coming back to wild beasts after so much time living in the Emerald City seems to have potential, but Baum doesn't do anything with it.

So, overall, a solid but uninspiring late-period Oz novel. My son seemed to enjoy it, and he did not like the idea that the magic island might cause Trot and Cap'n Bill to shrink away to nothing. I think it was while reading this one that he told me how [His Name] in Oz would begin: "A magician will send me to Oz, because he doesn't know I live in Florida, he thinks I live in Oz!" Which, to be honest, seems like the way an Oz novel really could begin.

* Though it was published after the war, I am pretty sure both this and Glinda of Oz were written during it, and you can definitely see traces of it in both. Here, we have would-be dictators amassing armies.
… (mais)
 
Marcado
Stevil2001 | outras 10 resenhas | Aug 19, 2022 |
L. Frank Baum is an author I have read many times since I first discovered him in second grade. I find that his books stand up to the test of time and they are books that I enjoy re-reading. Some of them are stronger than others but as a whole I quite enjoy both the stories and characters.
 
Marcado
KateKat11 | outras 10 resenhas | Sep 24, 2021 |
This has never been one of my favorite Baum Oz books, but on my first re-read as an adult, I found it surprisingly enjoyable. It's easy to dismiss as one of Baum's last four Oz stories because the other three are so startling in what they're doing differently, plot-wise; Lost Princess is a roadshow, with appearances from almost every one of Baum's protagonists, a peculiarly spiritual ending; Tin Woodman is an existential novel with moments of extreme dissonance; Glinda is female-oriented proto-science fiction. Magic is far more...well, normal...but there are still surprises: an unhappy, disgruntled protagonist; an invasion that peters out mid-book; and a generally melancholy tone for what's supposedly a book about a party. It's still not the most memorable book in the series, but it's better than I'd ever given it credit for, and more interesting than the mid-series books where Baum was clearly focusing elsewhere. If this is a "lesser" story, it's only because it's a bit more familiar; as a writer, he's clearly firing on all cylinders and perhaps, just before his death, at the peak of his abilities.… (mais)
 
Marcado
saroz | outras 10 resenhas | Nov 20, 2019 |

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Associated Authors

John Rea Neill Illustrator

Estatísticas

Obras
43
Also by
1
Membros
1,371
Popularidade
#18,761
Avaliação
3.8
Resenhas
21
ISBNs
175
Idiomas
8

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