![]() She’s relatable and it’s so easy to sympathize with her through the lens of this story. She’s down to earth but at the same time, she wants magic in her life, she wants there to be adventure, she wants everything to be unpredictable. She’s a girl who feels stuck in her life and a girl who wants more than is probably obtainable for her. That’s probably what worked out so well for the narrative is how relatable Dorothy is. Not just the villainous side of her but the side of her that is very believable and an extension of the Dorothy everyone knows and loves, the girl who went over the rainbow. ![]() No Place Like Oz really develops who Dorothy Gale and presents a different side of her. Published November 12, 2013, by HarperCollins, No Place Like Ozby Danielle Paige is the first in her short story collection that expands her take on Oz in her Dorothy Must Die series. ![]() ![]() And when a pair of red shoes appear under her bed with a note from an old friend, Dorothy knows just how to get back to Oz, and this time she’ll stay there, no matter the cost. ![]() Dorothy wants nothing more than to be returned to the vibrant landscapes of Oz, to be a hero of the people, but more importantly, a celebrity. Dorothy Gale, while happy to be back with her family, is unhappy with her dreary life back in Kansas where she was been reduced to just another ordinary prairie girl. ![]()
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