![]() ![]() She makes a dummy out of a crazy quilt, and selects doses of "Obedience," "Amiability," and "Truth" from her jars of "Brain Furniture." Ojo surreptitiously supplements the brain mixture with doses of all the other available possibilities: "Cleverness," "Poesy," "Self-Reliance," etc. Margolotte has used the Powder of Life (as seen in the second Oz book) to animate a glass cat named Bungle, and she plans to use the Powder to provide herself a servant. They have nothing to eat but bread, and there are only two loaves growing on their bread tree. ![]() The hero of the tale is a Munchkin boy named "Ojo the Unlucky" who lives with his Unc Nunkie in a remote part of the Munchkin Country. Baum dedicated the book to Sumner Hamilton Britton, the young son of his publisher Sumner Charles Britton. Frank Baum's Oz book series, which he was obliged to return to after a three year break due to his bankruptcy. The Patchwork Girl of Oz is the seventh book in L. ![]()
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