![]() ![]() Neill’s plates, embellished with metallic green ink, make first editions of this title particularly notable. Baum’s own bankruptcy the next year, however, would mean he “had no choice but to call once more upon the magic of Oz in an attempt to restore his fortunes” (Eyles, 48). By the tale’s end, the sorceress Glinda has made the fairyland invisible to the outside world, and Dorothy and her aunt and uncle, facing eviction from their Kansas farm, have settled in the Emerald City to stay. ![]() Neill.īaum intended to conclude his popular series with this volume. Octavo, original light blue cloth, mounted cover illustration, pictorial endpapers.įirst edition, first state, of the sixth Oz book, with 16 full-page color illustrations by John R. ![]() “THERE’S ALWAYS ROOM IN THE LAND OF OZ”: FIRST EDITION OF THE EMERALD CITY OF OZīAUM, L. ![]()
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