Sunday, February 9, 2014

Flora and Ulysses

2014 NEWBERY AWARD WINNER!!!
by Kate DiCamillo

Genre: Fantasy, I guess... It feels less like fantasy and more like just fiction, but it really is more fantastical.

It all started with a vacuum cleaner. When Tootie Tickham received an all-terrain one for her birthday and tried it outside (yes, it works on grass too), she accidentally sucked up a... squirrel?
Yes, a squirrel, and Flora, a natural-born cynic who loves reading comics, saved it from certain death. At first it just appears to be a regular, everyday squirrel who has just been sucked up into an all-terrain vacuum cleaner... But then it lifts up the vacuum cleaner. With one paw. The truth finally dawns on Flora: This squirrel is a superhero!
Flora names the squirrel Ulysses, and they become excellent friends. Ulysses, Flora soon finds out, can fly, write poetry, and of course, lift vacuum cleaners. But every superhero comes with an archvillain. And sure enough, Flora's cheesy-romance-novel-writing mother (who, by the way, cares more about a little shepherdess lamp than about Flora) hates Ulysses as soon as she sees him. She's convinced he's diseased, and is eager to get him out of the way and dead. Can Flora save Ulysses? Can Ulysses save himself? Can either of them save the world? Maybe they can't do it alone, but they can definitely do it together.

This book had a theme of friendship and love all the way through it. And, wonderfully, it was not between a boy and a girl or even human and human—it was between a girl and a squirrel. It's such a different idea... And Kate DiCamillo wrote the idea awesomely. She has dropped a lot of interesting characters into Flora and Ulysses. Another thing I like about this book is that there are some pictures. Sometimes there will be a comic strip illustrating part of the story. Sometimes there are full-page pictures to go along with the words. Sometimes there are small pictures next the words that show one thing they are talking about. Anyways, the pictures help the story a lot, especially the comic strips, because Flora likes comics a lot. Oh, and another good thing is because sometimes Kate DiCamillo writes in a somewhat roundabout, whimsical way, like she is writing for younger audiences, which isn't bad but sometimes it can be a little bit distracting, and in this book she writes in a more straightforward and clear manner. However, I stand firm in my belief that the best aspect in this book was the friendship and love theme. It was just carried off so beautifully!

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