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Dick Martin (2) (1927–1990)

Author of The Oz scrapbook

For other authors named Dick Martin, see the disambiguation page.

9+ Works 170 Members 1 Review

About the Author

Image credit: Dick Martin

Works by Dick Martin

Associated Works

The Tin Woodman of Oz (1918) — Map, some editions — 1,499 copies, 16 reviews
Finding Oz: How L. Frank Baum Discovered the Great American Story (2009) — Illustrator, some editions — 125 copies, 3 reviews
Merry Go Round in Oz (1963) — Illustrator — 67 copies, 4 reviews
Yankee in Oz (1973) — Illustrator — 42 copies, 2 reviews
The Visitors from Oz (2005) — Illustrator, some editions — 41 copies, 2 reviews
The Forbidden Fountain of Oz (1980) — Illustrator — 25 copies, 1 review
The Enchanted Island of Oz (1976) — Illustrator — 20 copies, 1 review
Animal Fairy Tales (1989) — Illustrator, some editions — 14 copies, 2 reviews
The Wizard of Way-Up and Other Wonders (1985) — Illustrator — 13 copies
Sissajig And Other Surprises (2003) — Illustrator — 12 copies
The Collected Short Stories of L. Frank Baum (2006) — Illustrator — 7 copies
The Musical Fantasies of L. Frank Baum — some editions — 5 copies
The American Book Collector — Contributor, some editions — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1927-06-29
Date of death
1990-02-14
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

1 review
After illustrating several Oz books by others—two by the McGraws and two by Ruth Plumly Thompson—Oz superfan Dick Martin illustrated his own Oz book for the International Wizard of Oz Club, The Ozmapolitan of Oz. The book takes its title from a "newspaper" sometimes produced by Reilly & Lee to promote the Oz books; here, for the first time, it is established within an actual Oz book, depicted as being founded by the Wizard back when he was the ruler of the Emerald City. The protagonist show more is Septimius "Tim" Septentrion, a copyboy for the paper who thinks it could be something great instead of the lazy operation it is. With Dorothy, Eureka the Pink Kitten, and a Mifkit named Jinx (possible the Mifket from Scalawagons), he sets out on an expedition to promote the newspaper and obtain interesting stories.

The newspaper angle ends up being incredibly unimportant in the end; Tim and company don't travel around doing journalism or anything like that, it's just the usual Oz hijinks of bumping into random people and places and moving on. Indeed, the book is definitely on the low end for incident, because usually the protagonists just meet someone, talk to them, and go somewhere else, and their overarching goal is honestly pretty hard to care about. They have no particular destination, they have no particular problem they are trying to solve. Nor do they really solve any particular problems, and most of the places they go are not really very interesting. It's like a weak Thompson novel but without Thompson's manic energy or commitment to excruciating puns. You're just left with... not much of anything, to be honest.

Martin tries to add in some kind of suspense, I guess, with a mysterious crow following the adventuring party about, and a mystery involving Tim. The details are so slight, however, there's little to glom onto; I think my six-year-old didn't even remember there had been a crow in the book before when it showed up for the second time. It turns out Tim is a prince trying to prove himself—the fun twist here is that he is trying to prove he can accomplish things because in his country royalty are not supposed to accomplish things. It's sort of an inversion of Thompson's Purple Prince of Oz. But unfortunately we don't even know he's trying to prove himself until we're told what the twist is, so it all falls flat, and my six-year-old didn't really follow it at all. I think it could have added some suspense, but not if it's all dumped on you in the second-last chapter.

On top of all this, Tim is a pretty dull protagonist, Dick Martin is one of those writers who doesn't remember how plucky Baum actually made Dorothy, and you could take Jinx the Mifket out of the book without affecting a thing. Only Eureka shows an ounce of characterization or energy. If you read Oz books for the interactions between interesting characters (and I do), there's none of it here. Sometimes Jinx and Eureka snipe a bit but that's about it.

Plus, weirdly, it seems like Dick Martin is as uninterested in providing visuals of his own ideas as he was those of the McGraws and Thompson. The pictures are scanty and often dull.

Anyway, I guess it has a few moments of charm (I like the bit where Eureka tricks a dinosaur with grammatical terms) but overall I found this had little going for it, and it seemed to leave little impression on my kid.
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Works
9
Also by
14
Members
170
Popularity
#125,473
Rating
3.8
Reviews
1
ISBNs
38

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