This is my second time reading this book and my first time reviewing it. The first time I read it was in high school and didn't really like it that much overall, except the part where all of the witches are in college together. I recently was lucky enough to get to see the musical and it made me want to read the book again. (It was awesome. But that's not what I'm here to talk about.) This time around I liked it a lot more, although I still found it really challenging and kind of get why I didn't like it as a teen. I think the two biggest turnoffs people have about this book can be reduced to:
1. It's a satire, and as a result sometimes comes off as pretty cynical.
This can be kind of wearing on you, and I kind of understand why people don't like it (like me in high school). Also, if you like the musical or movie, and want to dive right into this, you should definitely read L. Frank Baum's The Wonderful Wizard of Oz beforehand (which I did not do in high school). It not only helps put the story in context a little better, but you get a sense of the type of humor Baum and Maguire share. The Wonderful Wizard of Oz is also a satire, a critique of society at the times, and if you don't read Wicked as a similar critic of our modern day, then you are probably not getting what you should out of the novel anyways. (Or if you are an American you should just read The Wizard of Oz anyways because it is the most famous and possibly most culturally defining American fairy tale).
2. It's kind of a difficult read.
Full disclosure: last spring I graduated with a Bachelors degree in English. (And I will say I would consider myself pretty good at reading because I am one of those kids who did my homework and studied.) I still found this book pretty challenging. Wicked uses words I don't know. Pretty regularly. Also, I felt like I had to pay really close attention and read intuitively or I'd miss nuances in each scene. Many of them I had to go back and reread more carefully. In my opinion, this is a "literary" book and you have to read it like one. I feel I would have got the most out of this book if I had read it for a class, with time to reflect back on pieces of the book as I read them, and discussion with other people in between. Ultimately, it is one of those books that rewards you the more time you spend with it. But if I'm reading on an airplane or whatever, it's not as easy to just go and look up words or historical facts on demand to help myself out with context. As is, I feel like I could've written a forty-whatever page honors thesis about this book, but only after I read it a few more times. I'm still not sure where I'm at with regards to the ending (thoughts welcome!). I mean, there was one of those Reader Discussion guides in the back of my copy, and I only had answers to some of the questions in my mind. Usually I have thoughts on almost all of them. (Yes, I read those things.)
Overall I'd recommend Wicked as long as those two things don't sound like deterrents to you. It is a very complex and well-written book that will reward you the more time you spend reading it, rereading it, and thinking about it. This book is copyrighted in 1995, but it, like The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, is still very relevant. Wicked has a lot to apply to the censorship controversies, privacy debates and post-9/11 paranoia I see in the media all the time now.
Also, side note, evidently there's like a whole bunch of sequels! I might read those, but I feel like if I do that then I'd like to read the rest of those Oz books first. Which there are a lot of. So I don't know if I'm going to get to that anytime soon.


