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Yankee in Oz 1972 | First Edition Identification Guide

Yankee in Oz is a 1972 Oz novel by Ruth Plumly Thompson. It was the first published by The International Wizard of Oz Club. A letter from the Henry Regnery Company, which bought Reilly & Lee, is reproduced in the front indicating the publisher’s blessing for the new Oz book to appear. It was originally written in 1959, but because the Oz books were not selling, it was not published. The first two editions of the book were published in 8½ x 11 inch format and running only 94 pages. This was done at the request of illustrator Dick Martin to reduce the number of required illustrations and to show them closer to the actual size they were drawn. The second printing (1986) featured a new cover, with the first edition artwork reprinted preceding the title page. The third printing (2007) is standard Oz book size. Its cover is a gaudier redesign of the second edition cover. The book also features maps by James E. Haff, and as such, Thompson correctly places the Winkie Country in the west of Oz.

Summaries

Thompson - Yankee In Oz 1972 First Printing
Yankee in Oz 1972 first printing

The story begins with Thomas P. “Tompy” Terry, an athlete and musician son of a physicist, star drummer in his marching band at Pennwood prep in fictional small town, Pennwood, Pennsylvania, swept away by then-fictitious Hurricane Hannah on his way to the Labor Day parade.

He lands on the shore of Winkie Lake, where he meets Yankee, the first American dog in space, a bull terrier delighted at his newfound ability to talk.

The nearest town is Wackajammy, in the northeastern part of the Winkie Country, which is the breadbasket of the West. The King, Jackalack, believes that Tompy and Yankee are there to fulfill a prophecy to rescue their princess, his aunt, Doffi, who instructs all of the bakers of the town, who refuse to do any work without her present. Yammer Jammer, the king’s adviser, using a book called the Mind Reader determines that the two have no intent to do the search when they leave, and locks them in prison. Yankee is able to dig out during the night and get the key, and when they leave, they steal the Mind Reader.

Though determined to get home, Yankee in particular wishes to rescue the princess anyway. They next encounter an anteater, a town of powdered and packaged workaholic people, Tidy Town, whose king wants to force them to be listeners, cross into the Gillikin Country with the aid of Tim Ber the Trav-E-Log, meet a kindly but private woodsman named Axel, and a village of pleasant people with luminescent paper lanterns for heads who are active only at night.

Climbing Mount Upandup, they meet a flower fairy named Su-Posy who mentions that she delivers flowers to an imprisoned princess nearby to cheer her up. Also resting on this mountain is Jinnicky the Red Jinn, with whom Tompy and Yankee make fast friends.

Also living on the mountain is Badmannah, who has kidnapped Princess doffi, and soon after, uses a magic magnifying glass to abduct Princess Ozma and the entire Emerald City palace.

Regrouping at the Red Jinn’s palace, Yankee procures a net and attaches it to Jinnicky’s jinrikisha as a drag net, using it to capture Badmannah and lower him to the bottom of the Nonestic Ocean. He cannot drown here, being immortal like all Ozites, but it will get him out of the way for a while.

That leaves the task of restoring the Emerald City palace. Except for Ozma, the residents are all crammed into a magic box that Jinnicky has not allowed to be opened until the palace is restored, except when Yankee is briefly trapped as well. Once opened, Ozma is still missing. Using the Magic Picture, she is seen in Badmannah’s cave, Ozma having wished herself via the Magic Belt to the nearest safe place, and with Badmannah gone, it was. Using his red magic, Jinnicky restores the Emerald City.

Jinnicky flies Tompy home in his jinrikisha, and gives him a little jar to open when in need of his magic. Yankee is recognizable from newspapers, and Mr. Terry returns him to the Army, requesting that he be given an honorable discharge to be Tompy’s pet. The Army representative initially declines, but when Tompy opens the jar, relents.

Yankee retains the ability to speak once a week, and together, they decide to read The Purple Prince of Oz a chapter a night to learn about the adventures of their friend, Jinnicky.

Tompy is not the first traveler to Oz to be familiar with it from reading the books, which are explicitly referenced as being available in the United States as fairy tales—Peter Brown in The Gnome King of Oz briefly mentions having read an Oz book (Betsy Bobbin and Trot are aware of Oz before they get there, but we are not told how). It is, however, the first to mention another Oz book within the text, although John R. Neill had drawn an image of a shelf in Oz full of the Oz books, one being read. The book has no subplot, and moves straightforwardly through its single plot, uncharacteristic of previous Oz books, but typical of the deuterocanonical books of which it is the first.

Yankee in Oz First Edition Book Identification Points

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

Ruth Plumly Thompson - Yankee in Oz 1972 First Edition Identification Guide
YearTitlePublisherFirst edition/printing identification points
1972Yankee in OzThe International Wizard of Oz Club, Inc., [1972]First edition. Illustrated by Dick Martin, 94 pages. Two printings:

- 1 -

Textual points: Bound in a single gathering, saddle wire- stitched (stapled in the center). Page [6] contains the copy­right notice and an advertisement for Animal Fairy Tales and Yankee in Oz. Page [7] has a letter from the author with an address in Malvern, Pennsylvania, on the bottom left; there is a misprint in the final paragraph of the letter, “V” for “IV”. Page [10] has the seal of The International Wizard of Oz Club. Page [12] has a picture of the Red Jinn twirling a parasol. The book ends with page [96], a blank verso. There are no endpapers.

Binding: pictorial paper wrappers, trimmed to page size, printed on the front and back in color.

SECONDARY BINDING: A few months after the publication of the paperbound state, about one hundred copies were bound in light-blue cloth with a pictorial paper label on the front. The spine and back cover are blank. The book is side-stitched, and the paper wrappers are bound in as a double frontispiece. Still later, another fifty copies were bound in dark-gray cloth, with the same label. The label is narrow (10 1/4 by 3 inches), printed in black on yellow stock. About six labels were printed in black on red stock.

Size of leaf: 1 1 by 8 1/2 inches. Thickness of volume: A scant 1/4 inch. The copies in cloth are trimmed so that the size of the leaf is 10 3/4 by 8 1/4 inches; the thickness of volume is about 1/2 inch.

 - 2 -

The second printing was published in two forms.

A) Textual points: “Perfect-bound,” that is, the book is made up of single leaves held together at the spine with glue. The book reproduces on pages [2]-[3] the cover design of the first printing, in black and white. Including this picture required rearranging the preliminary and con­cluding material.
The following are the most important changes. Page [8] contains the copyright notice followed by “First published 1972"  Reprinted 1986   |   Cover copy­right 1986”; the seal of The International Wizard of Oz Club replaces the advertisement that appeared on the copy­right page in the first printing. Page [9] has the letter from the author with an address in Berwyn, Pennsylvania, on the bottom left, and the misprint has been corrected. The picture of the Red Jinn twirling a parasol has been moved to page [96]. Pages [97 ]-[99 ] contain a list of nineteen “Special Publications” of The International Wizard of Oz Club, dated Autumn 1986. At the foot of page [99] is a printer’s imprint of three lines. Page [100] has a picture of Yankee that was not in the first printing. There are no endpapers.

Binding: pictorial stiff-paper wrappers, trimmed to page size, and printed on the front and back with new illustrations in color. The spine is blank.

B) Textual points: 16-page gatherings except for the final which contains 20 pages. Blank inserted endpapers. Otherwise the text is identical with A.

Binding: gray-green cloth, stamped in black on the front with a reduced version of the drawing which was used as the front cover label of the first printing, secondary binding. The spine and the back cover are blank. Issued in a full-color dust jacket with illustrations and lettering identical with the wrappers of A. The front flap contains material about the story; the back flap lists 44 Oz books, followed by a picture of the Nome King.

Yankee in Oz First Edition Identification Points

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

Reference:

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

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