Okay, when I got The Green Goblins of Oz and The Land Before Oz, they came in a 3-pack with Havenly Dreams Beneath Oz. (Still available, by the way!) And that's not my copy scanned. My copy's cover got a little damaged when I was carrying it while walking and sweat made some of the cover get raw as my hand rubbed against it.
The connecting theme of the three books is the Goblin characters from Goblin Grotto, which was explored extensively in Green Goblins. Land Before Oz followed the two leads from that story on a new adventure.
Havenly Dreams (by Chris Dulabone and Marin Xiques) takes us back to Goblin Grotto to look at another side of life in that land of Goblins: specifically, the lives of Goblin children.
We meet two Goblin girls: Raspberry and Soulae. Raspberry lives with her rude mother and is teased and picked on by the other kids in school. She has read many of the Oz books and dreams of Oz all the time. She also misses her father who left when she was very young.
I was wondering if it would turn out that Raspberry's father was Yawner or Dumper, but no, it seems that Goblin women are so nasty, fathers eventually have to leave and never look back.
On the other hand, Soulae is the adopted daughter of a Goblin baroness, except her arrival at her home was delayed by several years and by the time she did arrive, the baroness had adopted from elsewhere and didn't want anymore children, so Soulae becomes a Cinderella-esque character, made to work while her lazy sisters enjoy life.
Soulae's life gets a surprise from Oz when Eddie Bear grants her wish to visit the Land of Oz (which she heard of from Billy Hill), and she has an exciting and perilous adventure with Dorothy, the Hungry Tiger, the Cowardly Lion, and the Tin Woodman before she finally returns home.
And one day, two little Goblin girls eventually meet...
Havenly Dreams Under Oz was a very enjoyable book, though I couldn't help but think the stories of Raspberry and Soulae were unevenly balanced. We follow Raspberry for several chapters, then Soulae, then Soulae's trip to Oz, which is almost a completely different story altogether. Finally, we get back to Goblin Grotto, where the story returns to its former form and concludes. Still, this is more of how the authors chose to write the story than an actual flaw. Being a writer myself, I would likely have approached the different storylines differently, but in the end, I enjoyed the story as it flowed.
Dennis Anfuso illustrated the book with his whimsical style.
So, I'd recommend Havenly Dreams, whether or not you also want Green Goblins and Land Before. It stands on its own as a very sweet story about how friendship and love can make a difference, even in a land of goblins.
You can get Havenly Dreams Beneath Oz here.
The Cute Invasion
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It sometimes seems like everyone who’s become famous in one artistic field
automatically thinks they can master others. How many actors do we see
putting o...





Ozma and the Wayward Wand, by Polly Berends - The son of Ozma's royal gardener sneaks into the palace to steal the fairy ruler's wand, and accidentally uses it to cause all sorts of disasters. I can't say much for the plot, which is resolved very easily, but the author generally does well by the existing characters. One oddity is that Dorothy knows how to swim and says she'll teach Ozma, while in Patchwork Girl Dorothy still can't swim. Also, the Nome King's tunnel is present, when it shouldn't be prior to Emerald City.
Mister Tinker in Oz, by James Howe - While I haven't read any of this author's other work, I've at least heard of him; he was the guy who wrote the Bunnicula series. In this book, easily the best of the three, we pick up on the story of one of Tik-Tok's creators. Mr. Tinker, who had departed Ev for the Moon, travels to Oz in Dorothy's company. Again, not that much plot, but I like the character of Mr. Tinker, and his inventions are clever. Incidentally, Howe's full name for the inventor is Ezra P. Tinker. In Jim Vander Noot's "Button-Bright and the Knit-Wits of Oz," his partner is named Rejano Edison Smith. Maybe Tinker's middle name could also be that of a real-world inventor. Ezra Pascal Tinker, perhaps?
Dorothy and the Magic Belt, by Susan Saunders - This one plays quite loosely with existing continuity, which is admittedly spotty already, but I think the author could have been a bit more careful. First, we have Dorothy being transported from Kansas to Oz right in front of Aunt Em and Uncle Henry, even though they don't believe in Oz at the beginning of Emerald City. Also, Mombi is transformed into a child, yet is still an old lady in Ruth Plumly Thompson's Lost King. There are some ideas I like here, though. Dr. Nikidik's son, Nikidik the Younger, uses a powder to turn everyone in the Emerald City into children so that he can steal the Magic Belt. The youthened Ozma turns back into Tip, and Mombi regains her magic because she hadn't forgotten it at her younger age. Chris Dulabone tried to resolve the continuity issues in this book with his own Dagmar by telling how Mombi regained her old form, but the explanation is rather convoluted out of necessity.









