The Road to Oz - Contents

Contents


     Chapter One - The Way to Butterfield
     Chapter Two - Dorothy Meets Button-Bright
     Chapter Three - A Queer Village
     Chapter Four - King Dox
     Chapter Five - The Rainbow's Daughter
     Chapter Six - The City of Beasts
     Chapter Seven - The Shaggy Man's Transformation
     Chapter Eight - The Musicker
     Chapter Nine - Facing the Scoodlers
     Chapter Ten - Escaping the Soup-Kettle
     Chapter Eleven - Johnny Dooit Does It
     Chapter Twelve - The Deadly Desert Crossed
     Chapter Thirteen - The Truth Pond
     Chapter Fourteen - Tik-Tok and Billina
     Chapter Fifteen - The Emperor's Tin Castle
     Chapter Sixteen - Visiting the Pumpkin Field
     Chapter Seventeen - The Royal Chariot Arrives
     Chapter Eighteen - The Emerald City
     Chapter Nineteen - The Shaggy Man's Welcome
     Chapter Twenty - Princess Ozma of Oz
     Chapter Twenty-one - Dorothy Receives the Guests
     Chapter Twenty-two - Important Arrivals
     Chapter Twenty-three - The Grand Banquet
     Chapter Twenty-four - The Birthday Celebration


The Road to Oz - Introduction

To My Readers


     Well, my dears, here is what you have asked for: another "Oz Book" about Dorothy's strange adventures. Toto is in this story, because you wanted him to be there, and many other characters which you will recognize are in the story, too. Indeed, the wishes of my little correspondents have been considered as carefully as possible, and if the story is not exactly as you would have written it yourselves, you must remember that a story has to be a story before it can be written down, and the writer cannot change it much without spoiling it.
     In the preface to "Dorothy and the Wizard of Oz" I said I would like to write some stories that were not "Oz" stories, because I thought I had written about Oz long enough; but since that volume was published I have been fairly deluged with letters from children imploring me to "write more about Dorothy," and "more about Oz," and since I write only to please the children I shall try to respect their wishes.
     There are some new characters in this book that ought to win your live. I'm very fond of the shaggy man myself, and I think you will like him, too. As for Polychrome -- the Rainbow's Daughter -- and stupid little Button-Bright, they seem to have brought a new element of fun into these Oz stories, and I am glad I discovered them. Yet I am anxious to have you write and tell me how you like them.
     Since this book was written I have received some very remarkable News from The Land of Oz, which has greatly astonished me. I believe it will astonish you, too, my dears, when you hear it. But it is such a long and exciting story that it must be saved for another book -- and perhaps that book will be the last story that will ever be told about the Land of Oz.

L. Frank Baum
Coronado, 1909


Electronic Book Classics by WebWalker Virtual Press, Saguache, Colorado USA.
© Copyright 1909 L. Frank Baum. (Now in the public domain)
Electronic Book Version © Copyright 1994-2010 John H. and Erika E. Keyes