Th E Patch W O Rk G Irl O F O Z L. Fran K B Au M the Patchwork Girl of Oz By

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Th E Patch W O Rk G Irl O F O Z L. Fran K B Au M the Patchwork Girl of Oz By Picture here The Patchwork Girl of Oz Girl of Patchwork The The Patchwork Girl of Oz By L. Frank Baum (1856-1919) An unlucky Munchkin boy named Ojo must travel around Oz gathering the ingredients for an antidote to the Liquid of Petrifaction which has turned his beloved uncle Unc Nunkie and the wife of the Liquid's creator into marble L. Frank Baum L. Frank statues. Ojo is joined by the patchwork girl Scraps, Dorothy, Dr. Pipt's Glass Cat, the Woozy, the Shaggy Man, the Scarecrow and the Tin Woodman. They eventually visit the Emerald City to ask for help from the Wizard of Oz. (Summary by Daniel Anaya) Total running time: 05:43:20. 00 - Prologue – 00:03:29 - Read by Daniel Anaya 01 - Ojo and Unc Nunkie – 00:05:08 - Read by Daniel Anaya 02 - The Crooked Magician – 00:13:16 - Read by Daniel Anaya 03 - The Patchwork Girl – 00:11:59 - Read by Daniel Anaya 04 - The Glass Cat – 00:08:29 - Read by Daniel Anaya 05 - A Terrible Accident – 00:15:27 - Read by Daniel Anaya 06 - The Journey – 00:18:32 - Read by Miriam Esther Goldman 07 - The Troublesome Phonograph – 00:11:35 - Read by Elizabeth Zaranka 08 - The Foolish Owl and the Wise Donkey – 00:07:23 - Read by Elizabeth Zaranka 09 - They Meet the Woozy – 00:20:36 - Read by Denice Stradling 10 - Shaggy Man to the Rescue – 00:11:58 - Read by Inga Parsons 11 - A Good Friend – 00:22:03 - Read by Inga Parsons 12 - The Giant Porcupine – 00:11:26 - Read by Eric Leach 13 - Scraps and the Scarecrow – 00:15:45 - Read by Eric Leach 14 - Ojo Breaks the Law – 00:10:59 - Read by Elli 15 - Ozma's Prisoner – 00:11:51 - Read by Elli 16 - Princess Dorothy – 00:11:28 - Read by Elli 17 - Ozma and Her Friends – 00:07:33 - Read by Elli 18 - Ojo Is Forgiven – 00:13:49 - Read by Mounica 19 - Trouble with the Tottenhots – 00:17:43 - Read by Mounica 20 - The Captive Yoop – 00:13:07 - Read by TriciaG 21 - Hip Hopper the Champion – 00:11:00 - Read by cher0520 22 - The Joking Horners – 00:14:14 - Read by TriciaG 23 - Peace is Declared – 00:13:41 - Read by TriciaG 24 - Ojo Finds the Dark Well – 00:02:58 - Read by Eric Leach 25 - They Bribe the Lazy Quadling – 00:08:43 - Read by Eric Leach Baum L. Frank 26 - The Trick River – 00:10:24 - Read by Eric Leach 27 - The Tin Woodman Objects – 00:12:43 - Read by cher0520 28 - The Wonderful Wizard of Oz – 00:06:01 - Read by cher0520 This recording is in the public domain and may be reproduced, distributed, or modified without permission. For more information or to volunteer, visit librivox.org. Cover image by John R. Neill (1913). Author picture taken by George Steckel (1911). Copyright expired in US, Canada, EU and all countries with author’s life +70 yrs laws. The Patchwork Girl of Oz Girl of Patchwork The Cover design by Janette Brown. This design is in the public domain. .
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    good john © good john © good john © good john © good john © john © good good john © john © good good good john good john © john good © © john good good © john good good good © john john good good © john © john good good © john © john good © john good © john good yman Frank Baum was born in Chittenango, butL then, a year after his father’s death in 1887, it was discovered that© a clerk had embezzled most of the Newcapital York in thein 1856, family’s into oil a childhoodcompany. Inof 1891 Baum took his wife and fourindulgent young sons luxury. to Chicago, He tried leaving several two professions failed enterprises behind in South– Dakota.actor, playwright, In 1896 he theatre completed manager, the newspaper good manuscripts of his first two children’sreporter, books. salesman Now in – hissecure early in forties, the knowledge that his © john Baum decided to earn his living asfather’s a writer. money would support him. He married in 1882 newspaperThe Wonderful cartoonist Wizard William of OzWallace was published Denslow. inThe 1900 story and was illustrated inspired by by Baum’s own love of Grimms’ Fairy Tales and by a wish to give his sons “a modernisedgood fairy tale, in which the wonderment and joy are retained and the heartaches and nightmares left out”. One of his sons john said the name of Oz came to his father when he was asked where his characters lived. Baum’s eye fell on the drawer of a filing cabinet which good © stored papers alphabetically O-Z and ‘Oz’ was born. Great Oz,The The earliest Emerald title City, for theFrom book Kansas was toThe Fairyland, City of Oz The, then Fairyland The City of of the johnOz, The Land of Oz and, finally, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz.
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