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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: bud not buddy, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Bud, Not Buddy Video

Bud Not BuddyNew Book Trailer!Bud, Not Buddy video

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2. Top 100 Children’s Novels #60: Bud, Not Buddy by Christopher Paul Curtis

#60 Bud, Not Buddy by Christopher Paul Curtis (1999)
35 points

When you hear that a book is about an orphan during the Great Depression, you might expect an emotional one-trick-pony – sadness to spare. Give Christopher Paul Curtis credit for bringing this era to life with vibrancy and flashes of surprising humor. Flint, Michigan is the setting here and sense of place figures big into this 2000 Newbery Medal winner. For us Michiganders, it feels like we’re sharing our piece of the map with the world. - Travis Jonker

I was a little surprised to find myself putting this one on my list. I don’t have the same level of personal affection for it that I have for the rest of my picks, but as I looked at various lists (Newbery, my own Goodreads reviews, etc.) I kept being drawn back to it, as one of the best written and memorable middle grade books in the last 15 years or so. - Mark Flowers

Bud slips down a bit from his previous position at #47 on our previous poll.  That isn’t to say he has serious staying power, though.  And as the first book Christopher Paul Curtis wrote for kids, few could argue with the statement that it is a doozy of a story.

The plot synopsis from the publisher reads, “It’s 1936 Flint, Michigan. Times may be hard, and 10-year-old Bud may be a motherless boy, but Bud’s got a few things going for him: 1. He has his own suitcase full of special things; 2. He’s the author of “Bud Caldwell’s Rules and Things for Having a Funner Life and Making a Better Liar Out of Yourself”; 3. His momma never told him who his father was, but she left a clue: posters of Herman E. Calloway and his band of renown, the Dusky Devastators of the Depression. Bud is sure those posters will lead him to his father. Once he decides to hit the road, nothing can stop him, not hunger, not fear, not would-be vampires, not even Herman E. Calloway himself.”

The book won both a Newbery Award and a Coretta Scott King Award in 2000.  In terms of the Newbery, it beat out Newbery Honors Getting Near to Baby by Audrey Couloumbis, Our Only May Amelia by Jennifer L. Holm, and 26 Fairmount Avenue by Tomie dePaola. About the Award, Curtis tells Leonard Marcus in the book Funny Business, “One of my sayings is ‘I get through life by having really low expectations.’  Anything good that happens is a bonus.  If it’s bad, well, I wasn’t expecting anything more, anyway.  The fact that I was older when I won the Newbery Medal made a real difference.  It wasn’t as likely to turn my head.  I have a good friend I’ve got to be careful around, because when I’m with him I laugh so hard I almost choke.  One of his sayings is ‘One day chicken, next day feathers.’  This is now.  Tomorrow may be something different.  Don’t take yourself too seriously.”

Of course this year we saw The Mighty Miss Malone, a companion novel to Bud, Not Buddy.  Bud does make a cameo appearance in the book, but it’s not quite what you’d expect.

The long gone but not forgotten Riverbank Review said of it, “Curtis writes with humor and sensitivity and makes readers care about the characters he creates. In the process, he offers up a significant slice of American history.”

Said Publishers Weekly, “Bud’s journey, punctuated by Dickensian twists in plot and enlivened by a host of memorable personalities, will keep readers engros

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