What I found very interesting in this book is the concept of home. On one hand, Kansas is a vast place without colour and beuty, full with dangerous cyclons. On the other hand, Oz seems to be fantastic and gorgeous. It is a marvelous city with forests, flowers, helpful people. It seems strange that Dorothy want to leave this land for her home. But the little girl never questions her return home. It seems that she realizes the significance of one’s roots.
Another astonishing thing is the concept of self-sufficiency. The Scarecrow does not think he possesses brains, the Tin Woodman laments his lack of heart and the Lion thinks he has no courage. Soon we realize that all these characters possess what it is they think they lack, but they are unable to see this for themselves. They believe they must ask the Wizard of Oz to help them. But in reality they do not have to ask anybody to fix their problem, they actually have within them what they need. The same strategy applies for Dorothy, who was already wearing the silver shoes that could have taken her home without the help of the witch. All these details made me realize that the all we need is within our inner depth and we are self-sufficient.
The novel makes it also clear how important friendship is. Dorothy’s friends provide her emotional and physical power. Her friends provide advice and together solve the journey’s problems. They are her protectors, her confidents and they volunteer to accompany her in a trip even if they have other duties. All this made us questioning if Dorothy would have arrived far without their help. The journey had an important value over Dorothy. It gave her some lessons: she appreciated the value of friendship, she saw the fight between good and evil, she learned to trust herself and her inner emotions. The journey gave her much more insight into herself.
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