Book Description
for Flora and Ulysses by Kate DiCamillo and K.G. Campbell
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
Flora's been pretty cynical since her parents' divorce. She spends most of her time reading superhero comics while her self-involved mom works on her next romance novel and her dad, with his lack of confidence, flounders. But when Flora sees a hapless squirrel sucked up by a vacuum, she's on the scene in an instant performing CPR (she learned it in the back of a comic book). "For a cynic I am a surprisingly helpful person," she thinks. The squirrel not only lives, but is changed by the experience. He understands what Flora says. And he can write-poetry no less-plunking out deep, thoughtful verses on the typewriter belonging to Flora's mom. Flora names him Ulysses (for the model of vacuum that was almost his demise) and thinks of him as a superhero in real life. Ulysses may not be able to save the world, but he just might be able to save Flora, restoring her belief in friendship and family. Kate DiCamillo's witty, wonderful work of magical realism is patently absurd with its flights of fancy and wordplay, but that's its charm. The lively prose narrative is punctuated by interludes of black-and-white panel illustrations by K. G. Campbell that showcase small vignettes of action while referencing the comic-book form. (Ages 8-10)
CCBC Choices 2014. © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2014. Used with permission.