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The Real Wizard of Oz is the story of the author of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, L. Frank Baum. He was always trying a new, outlandish business venture—a store full of exotic knick-knacks in the 1890 South Dakota...a touring acting company...an early film production company—and his businesses always failed. Then he created The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, and a franchise was born.
Quotes from the book:
“It would become a painful truth that when Baum stopped trying so hard, success came to him.”
“He (Baum) couldn't have written such a wise story so full of complex ideas as well as simple ones if he hadn't suffered and strived for so many years...His experiences as a child and as a man, his extensive reading through which he'd absorbed the oldest archetypes from folktales, had all jumbled together in his mind to make a brilliant cocktail, which surfaced intuitively as this brilliant, hyperreal story.”
“In the middle of writing a story, Baum sometimes fell into black moods. He would complain to Maud that ‘my characters just won't do what I want them to.' He learned that in order to finish a story, he had to let go and stop trying to force his characters to obey him; if he just let them do as they pleased, they would find their story themselves.”