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Pirates in Oz 1931 | First Edition Identification Guide

Pirates in Oz (1931) is the twenty-fifth in the series of Oz books created by L. Frank Baum and his successors, and the eleventh written by Ruth Plumly Thompson. It was illustrated by John R. Neill.

Summary

Thompson - Pirates in Oz 1931 1st printing
Pirates in Oz 1931 1st printing

Peter returns for a third time, washing up on the Octagon Isle after a shipwreck. He joins King Ato of the Octagon Isle, who has been abandoned by his subjects, and Captain Samuel Salt, who has been abandoned by his crew of pirates. Together, they sail on the Nonestic Ocean (which surrounds the continent which includes Oz and its neighbor countries).

Meanwhile, Ruggedo, the deposed Gnome King, is back. He had been cursed with loss of speech by a magical “Silence Stone” at the end of his previous appearance in The Gnome King of Oz, and is scraping out a living as a peddler and beggar. He decides to answer an advertisement for the position of King of the Land of Menankypoo, whose people are also mute. These people demand “a dumb king” and Ruggedo meets this requirement. While serving as king, he recovers his ability to speak, joins forces with an ambitious magician, and also becomes leader of Captain Salt’s mutinous pirates and Ato’s rebellious subjects. He trains these followers into a military force, and attempts once again to conquer Oz.

This is one of the few Oz books in which Ruggedo appears as a sympathetic character. The reader faces danger, overcomes obstacles, and experiences gratifying moments of triumph with him. Of the two narrative threads in the book, his is the more complex and suspenseful. (The other is Peter and Captain Salt and King Ato sailing around the Nonestic Ocean, visiting small islands.)

Besides Captain Salt, this book introduces two notable characters: Clocker, a clockwork man who is not as trustworthy as Tik-Tok, and Pigasus, a flying pig whose riders are magically compelled to speak in rhyming jingles. Pigasus returns as a principal character in The Wishing Horse of Oz while Captain Salt and King Ato return in Captain Salt in Oz.

Pirates in Oz First Edition Book Identification Points

Please refer to the gallery for detailed images of binding(s) and dust jackets.

Ruth Plumly Thompson - Pirates in Oz 1931 First Edition Identification Guide
YearTitlePublisherFirst edition/printing identification points
1931Pirates in OzReilly & Lee Co., [1931]First edition. Illustrated by John R. Neill, 280 pages.

Textual points: Pictorial self-endpapers in black and white.

Color plates: 12 full-color inserts, tipped in facing title page and pages 48, 64, 80, 104, 128, 144, 160, 176, 208, 256, 272. Printed on stock coated only on the printed side.

Binding: medium-green (textured or untextured), turquoise (untextured), off-white (textured), or light olive­green (textured) cloth, with pictorial paper label in colors. Priority of the cloth colors has not been established, but there is some indication that the medium-green copies are the earliest. Spine imprint in boldface: “Reilly   |   & Lee”.

SECONDARY BINDING: Medium-green cloth, with the spine imprint in the semi-script, “fancy” letters (ca. 1934).

Size of leaf: 9 by 6 5/8 inches. Thickness of volume: 1 3/8 inches.

Copies have been seen with the Canadian imprint of the Copp, Clark Co., Limited, of Toronto. With the exception of the publisher’s imprint on the title page and spine, they are identical with the first state. They have medium-green, textured-cloth binding cases.


Later Printings

All copies printed after 1935 have no color plates.

Pirates in Oz First Edition Dust Jacket Identification Points

First edition binding(s) and various dust jacket printings identification.

References:

  • Wikipedia
  • Bibliographia Oziana – Haff, Greeme, Martin. 2002

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