Bud, Not Buddy

by Christopher Paul Curtis (Author)

Reading Level: 4th − 5th Grade
Ten-year-old Bud, a motherless boy living in Flint, Michigan, during the Great Depression, escapes a bad foster home and sets out in search of the man he believes to be his father--the renowned bandleader, Herman E. Calloway.
Select format:
Mass Market Paperbound
$8.99

Find books about:

Publishers Weekly

Starred Review
As in his Newbery Honor-winning debut, The Watsons Go to Birmingham--1963, Curtis draws on a remarkable and disarming mix of comedy and pathos, this time to describe the travails and adventures of a 10-year-old African-American orphan in Depression-era Michigan. Bud is fed up with the cruel treatment he has received at various foster homes, and after being locked up for the night in a shed with a swarm of angry hornets, he decides to run away. His goal: to reach the man he--on the flimsiest of evidence--believes to be his father, jazz musician Herman E. Calloway. Relying on his own ingenuity and good luck, Bud makes it to Grand Rapids, where his "father" owns a club. Calloway, who is much older and grouchier than Bud imagined, is none too thrilled to meet a boy claiming to be his long-lost son. It is the other members of his band--Steady Eddie, Mr. Jimmy, Doug the Thug, Doo-Doo Bug Cross, Dirty Deed Breed and motherly Miss Thomas--who make Bud feel like he has finally arrived home. While the grim conditions of the times and the harshness of Bud's circumstances are authentically depicted, Curtis shines on them an aura of hope and optimism. And even when he sets up a daunting scenario, he makes readers laugh--for example, mopping floors for the rejecting Calloway, Bud pretends the mop is "that underwater boat in the book Momma read to me, Twenty Thousand Leaks Under the Sea." Bud's journey, punctuated by Dickensian twists in plot and enlivened by a host of memorable personalities, will keep readers engrossed from first page to last. Ages 9-12. (Sept.) Copyright 1999 Publishers Weekly Used with permission.

School Library Journal

Starred Review
Gr 4-7-When 10-year-old Bud Caldwell runs away from his new foster home, he realizes he has nowhere to go but to search for the father he has never known: a legendary jazz musician advertised on some old posters his deceased mother had kept. A friendly stranger picks him up on the road in the middle of the night and deposits him in Grand Rapids, MI, with Herman E. Calloway and his jazz band, but the man Bud was convinced was his father turns out to be old, cold, and cantankerous. Luckily, the band members are more welcoming; they take him in, put him to work, and begin to teach him to play an instrument. In a Victorian ending, Bud uses the rocks he has treasured from his childhood to prove his surprising relationship with Mr. Calloway. The lively humor contrasts with the grim details of the Depression-era setting and the particular difficulties faced by African Americans at that time. Bud is a plucky, engaging protagonist. Other characters are exaggerations: the good ones (the librarian and Pullman car porter who help him on his journey and the band members who embrace him) are totally open and supportive, while the villainous foster family finds particularly imaginative ways to torture their charge. However, readers will be so caught up in the adventure that they won't mind. Curtis has given a fresh, new look to a traditional orphan-finds-a-home story that would be a crackerjack read-aloud.-Kathleen Isaacs, Edmund Burke School, Washington, DC Copyright 1999 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

Bud not buddy

bud not buddy is a alsome book i read it in 5th grade

Christopher Paul Curtis
Christopher Paul Curtis was awarded both a Newbery Honor and a Coretta Scott King Honor for his debut book, The Watsons Go to Birmingham -- 1963, and won the Newbery Medal and the Coretta Scott King Award for his second book, Bud, Not Buddy. Mr. Curtis is also the author of the Golden Kite Award-winning Bucking the Sarge, as well as Mr. Chickee's Funny Money, Mr. Chickee's Messy Mission, and the Newbery Honor book Elijah of Buxton.
Classification
Fiction
ISBN-13
9780553494105
Lexile Measure
950
Guided Reading Level
U
Publisher
Delacorte Press
Publication date
September 14, 2004
Series
-
BISAC categories
JUV001000 - Juvenile Fiction | Action & Adventure
JUV013060 - Juvenile Fiction | Family | Parents
JUV039130 - Juvenile Fiction | Social Themes | Runaways
Library of Congress categories
African Americans
Missing persons
Runaways
Depressions
1929
Maine Student Book Award
Second Place 2001 - 2001
Newbery Medal
Winner 2000 - 2000
Book Sense Book of the Year Award
Nominee 2000 - 2000
Bluebonnet Awards
Nominee 2002 - 2002
Coretta Scott King Award
Winner 2000 - 2000
Parents Choice Award (Fall) (1998-2007)
Winner 1999 - 1999
Rebecca Caudill Young Readers Book Award
Nominee 2002 - 2002
Pennsylvania Young Reader's Choice Award
Winner 2001 - 2001
Sunshine State Young Reader's Award
Nominee 2002 - 2002
Dorothy Canfield Fisher Children's Book Award
Winner 2001 - 2001
Grand Canyon Reader Award
Winner 2002 - 2002
Nene Award
Winner 2002 - 2002
Massachusetts Children's Book Award
Honor Book 2001 - 2002
William Allen White Childens Book Award
Winner 2002 - 2002
Land of Enchantment Book Award
Winner 2002 - 2003
Louisiana Young Readers' Choice Award
Honor Book 2002 - 2002

Subscribe to our delicious e-newsletter!