Jump to content

L. Frank Baum's Juvenile Speaker

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
L. Frank Baum's Juvenile Speaker
First edition
AuthorL. Frank Baum
IllustratorMaginel Wright Enright
John R. Neill
LanguageEnglish
GenrePoetry, Humor, Fantasy, Drama
PublisherReilly & Britton
Publication date
1910
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePrint (hardcover)
Pages196 pp.

L. Frank Baum's Juvenile Speaker: Readings and Recitations in Prose and Verse, Humorous and Otherwise is an anthology of literary works by L. Frank Baum, author of the Oz books. The book was first published in 1910, with illustrations by veteran Baum artists John R. Neill and Maginel Wright Enright; a subsequent 1912 edition was retitled Baum's Own Book for Children.[1] The book constitutes a complex element in the Baum bibliography.[2]

Baum intended the anthology for schools, to be used in instruction in public speaking. The collection includes versions of previously published material from Baum's Oz books, Father Goose, and other works, plus new selections like Prince Marvel, a short play for child actors based on The Enchanted Island of Yew.

One of the selections is "Little Bun Rabbit," the final piece in Baum's Mother Goose in Prose from 1897. The protagonist in Baum's version of the nursery rhyme is a little girl who can talk to animals – named Dorothy. When Baum reprinted in story in his Juvenile Speaker, he changed the character's name to Doris, to forestall confusion with Dorothy Gale from The Wonderful Wizard of Oz.[3][4]

Baum made other revisions in his reprinted texts. One example: the 20th chapter in The Wonderful Wizard, "The Dainty China Country," was revised into a stand-alone tale, "In Chinaland;" and Baum removed the detail in which the Cowardly Lion accidentally destroys a small china church with his tail.[5]

Reprints

[edit]

Materials from the Juvenile Speaker were republished in different volumes in later years. In 1916 and 1917, Baum's publisher Reilly & Britton issued stories from the anthology in six smaller 62-page books collectively called The Snuggle Tales, with black-and-white Neill illustrations. (They were originally sold for $0.40 each.) The publisher had used this approach successfully in the Little Wizard Stories of Oz in 1913–14, as a way of reaching beginning readers. The six Snuggle Tales books are:

  • Little Bun Rabbit and Other Stories (1916)
  • Once Upon a Time and Other Stories (1916)
  • The Yellow Hen and Other Stories (1916)
  • The Magic Cloak and Other Stories (1916)
  • The Gingerbread Man (1917)
  • Jack Pumpkinhead (1917).

In turn, The Snuggle Tales were later republished with added color plates as the Oz-Man Tales, issued in 1920.

To illustrate the type of materials involved, consider the contents of the fourth Snuggle Tales volume, The Magic Cloak and Other Stories:

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Patrick M. Maund, "Bibliographia Baumiana: L. Frank Baum's Juvenile Speaker and Baum's Own Book for Children," The Baum Bugle, Vol. 40 No. 3 (Winter 1996), pp. 32-3.
  2. ^ Douglas G. Greene and Peter E. Hanff, Bibliographia Oziana: A Concise Bibliographical Checklist of the Oz Books of L. Frank Baum and His Successors, revised and enlarged edition, Kinderhook, IL, International Wizard of Oz Club, 1988.
  3. ^ L. Frank Baum, The Annotated Wizard of Oz, Edited with an Introduction and Notes by Michael Patrick Hearn; revised edition, New York, W. W. Norton, 2000; p. 12.
  4. ^ Martin Gardner, "Mother Goose in Prose," The Baum Bugle, Vol. 41 No. 3 (Winter 1997), pp. 8-12; see p. 10.
  5. ^ The Annotated Wizard of Oz, p. 328.
[edit]