A review by nothingforpomegranted
Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West by Gregory Maguire

adventurous dark slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

1.75

The writers, producers, and actors of the Broadway production inspired by this novel deserve all the more praise now that I have read the source material. The imagination required to turn this book into the joyful, hopeful, engrossing story that comes to life on stage is phenomenal, and it definitely made me want to go see the show again. 

Gregory Maguire's novel introduces Elphaba's parents--a unionist minister and his lustful, unfaithful wife--leading up to the birth of the green, fanged, fearsome infant who grows up with her mother's Nanny and her mother's lover Turtle Heart. As a teenager, Elphaba goes to school at Shiz, where she encounters Galinda, Boq, Fiyero, and a number of other characters who are mostly undistinguishable. Elphaba becomes passionate about the perceived corruption of the Wizard's reign and progresses from Shiz to the Emerald City, a mauntery (something of a nunnery), and the land of the Winkies.

From the outset, the world that Maguire builds is confusing and incomplete, with countless references to deities, histories, and characters that are never clarified or explained. Contributing to the lack of clarity are the time jumps; between each section, Elphaba has aged an unmentioned number of years and become increasingly more reserved and resentful. Her missions against convention (and corruption) are unclear, and the enemy is never clearly defined. 

With unlikeable--indeed, unapproachable--characters and such confusion, it was nearly impossible for me to enjoy this book, especially as a high fantasy skeptic to begin with. That someone could have read this novel and written the book for the musical is shocking to me, but I'm certainly grateful for all their work and inspiration. 

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