






The Oz books in Puffin
THE WIZARD OF OZ
THE MARVELLOUS LAND OF OZ
OZMA OF OZ
DOROTHY AND THE WIZARD IN OZ
THE ROAD TO OZ
THE EMERALD CITY OF OZ
THE PATCHWORK GIRL OF OZ
TIK -TOK OF OZ

THE WIZARD OF OZ
THE MARVELLOUS LAND OF OZ
OZMA OF OZ
DOROTHY AND THE WIZARD IN OZ
THE ROAD TO OZ
THE EMERALD CITY OF OZ
THE PATCHWORK GIRL OF OZ
TIK -TOK OF OZ
UK | USA | Canada | Ireland | Australia India | New Zealand | South Africa
Puffin Books is part of the Penguin Random House group of companies whose addresses can be found at global.penguinrandomhouse.com www.penguin.co.uk www.puffin.co.uk www.ladybird.co.uk
First published 1904
Published in Puffin Books 1985 Reissued 1990
This edition published 2025 001
Cover illustration copyright © Steven Lenton, 2025
The moral right of the author and illustrator has been asserted Penguin Random House values and supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes freedom of expression and supports a vibrant culture. Thank you for purchasing an authorized edition of this book and for respecting intellectual property laws by not reproducing, scanning or distributing any part of it by any means without permission. You are supporting authors and enabling Penguin Random House to continue to publish books for everyone. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner for the purpose of training artificial intelligence technologies or systems. In accordance with Article 4(3) of the DSM Directive 2019/790, Penguin Random House expressly reserves this work from the text and data mining exception.
Set in 12.5/18pt Minion Pro by Six Red Marbles UK , Thetford, Norfolk Printed and bound in Great Britain by Clays Ltd, Elcograf S.p.A.
The authorized representative in the EEA is Penguin Random House Ireland, Morrison Chambers, 32 Nassau Street, Dublin D0 2 YH 68
A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library isbn : 978–0–241–76162–5
All correspondence to: Puffin Books
Penguin Random House Children’s One Embassy Gardens, 8 Viaduct Gardens, London SW 11 7BW
To those excellent good fellows and eminent comedians
DAVID C. MONTGOMERY and FRED A. STONE
whose clever personations of the TIN WOODMAN and the SCARECROW
have delighted thousands of children throughout the land, this book is gratefully dedicated by THE AUTHOR
In the Country of the Gillikins, which is at the North of the Land of Oz, lived a youth called Tip. There was more to his name than that, for old Mombi often declared that his whole name was Tippetarius; but no one was expected to say such a long word when ‘Tip’ would do just as well.
This boy remembered nothing of his parents, for he had been brought when quite young to be reared by the old woman known as Mombi, whose reputation, I am sorry to say, was none of the best. For the Gillikin people had reason to suspect her of indulging in magical arts, and therefore hesitated to associate with her.
Mombi was not exactly a witch, because the Good Witch who ruled that part of the Land of Oz had
forbidden any other witch to exist in her dominions. So Tip’s guardian, however much she might aspire to working magic, realized it was unlawful to be more than a sorceress, or at most a wizardess.
Tip was made to carry wood from the forest, that the old woman might boil her pot. He also worked in the cornfields, hoeing and husking; and he fed the pigs and milked the four-horned cow that was Mombi’s especial pride.
But you must not suppose he worked all the time, for he felt that would be bad for him. When sent to the forest Tip often climbed trees for birds’ eggs or amused himself chasing the fleet white rabbits or fishing in the brooks with bent pins. Then he would hastily gather his armful of wood and carry it home. And when he was supposed to be working in the cornfields, and the tall stalks hid him from Mombi’s view, Tip would often dig in the gopher holes, or – if the mood seized him – lie upon his back between the rows of corn and take a nap. So, by taking care not to exhaust his strength, he grew as strong and rugged as a boy may be.
Mombi’s curious magic often frightened her neighbours, and they treated her shyly, yet respectfully,
because of her weird powers. But Tip frankly hated her, and took no pains to hide his feelings. Indeed he sometimes showed less respect for the old woman than he should have done, considering she was his guardian.
There were pumpkins in Mombi’s cornfields, lying golden red among the rows of green stalks; and these had been planted and carefully tended that the fourhorned cow might eat of them in the winter time. But one day, after the corn had all been cut and stacked, and Tip was carrying the pumpkins to the stable, he took a notion to make a ‘Jack Lantern’ and try to give the old woman a fright with it.
So he selected a fine big pumpkin – one with a lustrous orange-red colour – and began carving it. With the point of his knife he made two round eyes, a three-cornered nose and a mouth shaped like a new moon. The face, when completed, could not have been considered strictly beautiful, but it wore a smile so big and broad, and was so jolly in expression, that even Tip laughed as he looked admiringly at his work.
The child had no playmates, so he did not know that boys often dig out the inside of a ‘pumpkinjack’, and in the space thus made put a lighted
candle to render the face more startling, but he conceived an idea of his own that promised to be quite as effective. He decided to manufacture the form of a man, who would wear this pumpkin head, and to stand it in a place where old Mombi would meet it face to face.
‘And then,’ said Tip to himself, with a laugh, ‘she’ll squeal louder than the brown pig does when I pull her tail, and shiver with fright worse than I did last year when I had the ague!’
He had plenty of time to accomplish this task, for Mombi had gone to a village – to buy groceries, she said – and it was a journey of at least two days.
So he took his axe to the forest and selected some stout, straight saplings, which he cut down and trimmed of all their twigs and leaves. From these he would make the arms and legs and feet of his man. For the body he stripped a sheet of thick bark from around a big tree, and with much labour fashioned it into a cylinder of about the right size, pinning the edges together with wooden pegs. Then, whistling happily as he worked, he carefully jointed the limbs and fastened them to the body with pegs whittled into shape with his knife.
By the time this feat had been accomplished it began to grow dark, and Tip remembered he must milk the cow and feed the pigs. So he picked up his wooden man and carried it back to the house with him.
During the evening, by the light of the fire in the kitchen, Tip carefully rounded all the edges of the joints and smoothed the rough places in a neat and workmanlike manner. Then he stood the figure up against the wall and admired it. It seemed remarkably tall, even for a full-grown man; but that was a good point in a small boy’s eyes, and Tip did not object at all to the size of his creation.
Next morning, when he looked at his work again, Tip saw he had forgotten to give the dummy a neck, by means of which he might fasten the pumpkin head to the body. So he went again to the forest, which was not far away, and chopped from a tree several pieces of wood with which to complete his work. When he returned he fastened a crosspiece to the upper end of the body, making a hole through the centre to hold upright the neck. The bit of wood which formed this neck was also sharpened at the upper end, and when all was ready Tip put on the pumpkin head, pressing it well down on to the neck, and found that it fitted
very well. The head could be turned to one side or the other as he pleased, and the hinges of the arms and legs allowed him to place the dummy in any position he desired.
‘Now that,’ declared Tip, proudly, ‘is really a very fine man, and it ought to frighten several screeches out of old Mombi! But it would be much more lifelike if it were properly dressed.’
To find clothing seemed no easy task, but Tip boldly ransacked the great chest in which Mombi kept all her keepsakes and treasures, and at the very bottom he discovered some purple trousers, a red shirt and a pink waistcoat dotted with white spots. These he carried away to his man and succeeded, although the garments did not fit very well, in dressing the creature in a jaunty fashion. Some knit stockings belonging to Mombi and a much worn pair of his own shoes completed the man’s apparel, and Tip was so delighted that he danced up and down and laughed aloud in boyish ecstasy.
‘I must give him a name!’ he cried. ‘So good a man as this must surely have a name. I believe,’ he added, after a moment’s thought, ‘I will name the fellow “Jack Pumpkinhead”!’
After considering the matter carefully, Tip decided that the best place to locate Jack would be at the bend in the road, a little way from the house. So he started to carry his man there, but found him heavy and rather awkward to handle. After dragging the creature a short distance Tip stood him on his feet, and by first bending the joints of one leg, and then those of the other – at the same time pushing from behind – the boy managed to induce Jack to walk to the bend in the road. It was not accomplished without a few tumbles, and Tip really worked harder than he ever had in the fields or forest, but a love of mischief urged him on, and it pleased him to test the cleverness of his workmanship.
‘Jack’s all right, and works fine!’ he said to himself, panting with the unusual exertion. But just then he discovered the man’s left arm had fallen off in the journey; so he went back to find it, and afterwards, by whittling a new and stouter pin for the shoulder joint, he repaired the injury so successfully that the arm was stronger than before. Tip also noticed that Jack’s pumpkin head had twisted around until it faced his back; but this was easily remedied. When, at last, the man was set up facing the turn in the path where old Mombi was to appear, he looked natural enough to be a fair imitation of a Gillikin farmer – and unnatural enough to startle anyone that came on him unawares.
As it was yet too early in the day to expect the old woman to return home, Tip went down into the valley below the farmhouse and began to gather nuts from the trees that grew there.
However, old Mombi returned earlier than usual. She had met a crooked wizard who resided in a lonely cave in the mountains, and had traded several important secrets of magic with him. Having in this way secured three new recipes, four magical powders and a selection of herbs of wonderful power and
potency, she hobbled home as fast as she could, in order to test her new sorceries.
So intent was Mombi on the treasures she had gained that when she turned the bend in the road and caught a glimpse of the man, she merely nodded and said:
‘Good evening, sir.’
But, a moment after, noting that the person did not move or reply, she cast a shrewd glance into his face and discovered his pumpkin head – elaborately carved by Tip’s jack-knife.
‘Heh!’ ejaculated Mombi, giving a sort of grunt; ‘that rascally boy has been playing tricks again! Very good! ve-ry good ! I’ll beat him black and blue for trying to scare me in this fashion!’
Angrily she raised her stick to smash in the grinning pumpkin head of the dummy; but a sudden thought made her pause, the uplifted stick left motionless in the air.
‘Why, here is a good chance to try my new powder!’ said she eagerly. ‘And then I can tell whether that crooked wizard has fairly traded secrets, or whether he has fooled me as wickedly as I fooled him.’
So she set down her basket and began fumbling in it for one of the precious powders she had obtained.
While Mombi was thus occupied Tip strolled back, with his pockets full of nuts, and discovered the old woman standing beside his man and apparently not the least bit frightened by it.
At first he was greatly disappointed; but the next moment he became curious to know what Mombi was going to do. So he hid behind a hedge, where he could see without being seen, and prepared to watch.
After some search the woman drew from her basket an old pepper-box, upon the faded label of which the wizard had written with a lead pencil: ‘Powder of Life’.
‘Ah – here it is!’ she cried joyfully. ‘And now let us see if it is potent. The stingy wizard didn’t give me much of it, but I guess there’s enough for two or three doses.’
Tip was much surprised when he overheard this speech. Then he saw old Mombi raise her arm and sprinkle the powder from the box over the pumpkin head of his man Jack. She did this in the same way one would pepper a baked potato, and the powder sifted down from Jack’s head and scattered over the red shirt and pink waistcoat and purple trousers Tip
had dressed him in, and a portion even fell upon the patched and worn shoes.
Then, putting the pepper-box back into the basket, Mombi lifted her left hand, with its little finger pointed upwards, and said:
‘Weaugh!’
Then she lifted her right hand, with the thumb pointed upwards, and said: ‘Teaugh!’
Then she lifted both hands, with all the fingers and thumbs spread out, and cried: ‘Peaugh!’
Jack Pumpkinhead stepped back a pace at this, and said in a reproachful voice:
‘Don’t yell like that! Do you think I’m deaf?’
Old Mombi danced around him, frantic with delight.
‘He lives!’ she screamed. ‘He lives! He lives!’
Then she threw her stick into the air and caught it as it came down, and she hugged herself with both arms, and tried to do a step of a jig; and all the time she repeated rapturously:
‘He lives! He lives! He lives!’
Now you may well suppose that Tip observed all this with amazement.
At first he was so frightened and horrified that he wanted to run away, but his legs trembled and shook so badly that he couldn’t. Then it struck him as a very funny thing for Jack to come to life, especially as the expression on his pumpkin face was so droll and comical it excited laughter on the instant. So, recovering from his first fear, Tip began to laugh, and the merry peals reached old Mombi’s ears and made her hobble quickly to the hedge, where she seized Tip’s collar and dragged him back to where she had left her basket and the pumpkin-headed man.
‘You naughty, sneaking, wicked boy!’ she exclaimed furiously. ‘I’ll teach you to spy out my secrets and to make fun of me!’
‘I wasn’t making fun of you,’ protested Tip. ‘I was laughing at old Pumpkinhead! Look at him! Isn’t he a picture though?’
‘I hope you are not reflecting on my personal appearance,’ said Jack. And it was so funny to hear his grave voice, while his face continued to wear its jolly smile, that Tip again burst into a peal of laughter.
Even Mombi was not without a curious interest in the man her magic had brought to life; for, after staring at him intently, she presently asked:
‘What do you know?’
‘Well, that is hard to tell,’ replied Jack. ‘For although I feel that I know a tremendous lot, I am not yet aware how much there is in the world to find out about. It will take me a little time to discover whether I am very wise or very foolish.’
‘To be sure,’ said Mombi thoughtfully.
‘But what are you going to do with him, now he is alive?’ asked Tip, wondering.
‘I must think it over,’ answered Mombi. ‘But we must get home at once, for it is growing dark. Help the Pumpkinhead to walk.’
‘Never mind me,’ said Jack; ‘I can walk as well as you can. Haven’t I got legs and feet, and aren’t they jointed?’
‘Are they?’ asked the woman, turning to Tip.
‘Of course they are; I made ‘em myself,’ returned the boy with pride.
So they started for the house, but when they reached the farmyard old Mombi led the pumpkin man to the cow-stable and shut him up in an empty stall, fastening the door securely on the outside.
‘I’ve got to attend to you first,’ she said, nodding her head at Tip.
Hearing this the boy became uneasy; for he knew Mombi had a bad and revengeful heart, and would not hesitate to do any evil thing.
They entered the house. It was a round, domeshaped structure, as are nearly all the farmhouses in the Land of Oz.
Mombi bade the boy light a candle, while she put her basket in a cupboard and hung her cloak on a peg. Tip obeyed quickly, for he was afraid of her.
After the candle had been lighted Mombi ordered him to build a fire in the hearth, and while Tip was thus engaged the old woman ate her supper. When the flames began to crackle the boy came to her and asked a share of the bread and cheese, but Mombi refused him.
‘I’m hungry!’ said Tip in a sulky tone.
‘You won’t be hungry long,’ replied Mombi with a grim look.
The boy didn’t like this speech, for it sounded like a threat; but he happened to remember he had nuts in his pockets, so he cracked some of those and ate them while the woman rose, shook the crumbs from her apron and hung above the fire a small black kettle.
Then she measured out equal parts of milk and vinegar and poured them into the kettle. Next she produced several packets of herbs and powders and began adding a portion of each to the contents of the kettle. Occasionally she would draw near the candle and read from a yellow paper the recipe of the mess she was concocting.
As Tip watched her his uneasiness increased.
‘What is that for?’ he asked.
‘For you,’ returned Mombi briefly.
Tip wriggled around upon his stool and stared awhile at the kettle, which was beginning to bubble. Then he would glance at the stern and wrinkled features of the witch and wish he were any place but in that dim and smoky kitchen, where even the shadows cast by the candle upon the wall were enough to give one the horrors. So an hour passed away, during which the silence was only broken by the bubbling of the pot and the hissing of the flames.
Finally, Tip spoke again.
‘Have I got to drink that stuff?’ he asked, nodding towards the pot.
‘Yes,’ said Mombi.
‘What’ll it do to me?’ asked Tip.