Bud, Not Buddy is a historical YA novel published by American writer Christopher Paul Curtis in 1999. This novel created in Flint, Michigan in 1936 is the story of homeless 10-year-old Bad Caldwell who fled with his friend Burgess. To the west. On the way, he tried to jump in the train and slept very thick, but failed away from the worm. Then he started looking for his father he thought he was a jazz band 's Depression Destroyer, and he thought it was a man. Later, when they met, Bard discovered that Herman was actually his grandfather and was not satisfied with the idea of taking care of his grandchild. When he told Herman that his mother was dead, Herman was sad, but Bard received a horn from the band and had a place to sleep, so I thought the future would brighten up in the future. Bud, not a buddy, won the 2000 American Pediatric Literature Award
Young Bud tells his story in BUD with his own lively voice rather than BUDDY. Sometimes, a tenacious, sad, flexible, and pleasant 10-year-old bird is not at all attractive. His personality, coupled with the fast pace of the story, attracted the attention of young readers on the first page and continued to rivet them until the end.
Bud, Not Buddy is a historical YA novel published by American writer Christopher Paul Curtis in 1999. This novel created in Flint, Michigan in 1936 is the story of homeless 10-year-old Bad Caldwell who fled with his friend Burgess. To the west. On the way, he tried to jump in the train and slept very thick, but failed away from the worm. Then he started looking for his father he thought he was a jazz band 's Depression Destroyer, and he thought it was a man. Later, when they met, Bard discovered that Herman was actually his grandfather and was not satisfied with the idea of taking care of his grandchild. When he told Herman that his mother was dead, Herman was sad, but Bard received a horn from the band and had a place to sleep, so I thought the future would brighten up in the future. Bud, not a buddy, won the 2000 American Pediatric Literature Award
Buddy followed the 10-year-old boy who is looking for a father he had never seen before during the Great Depression instead of a buddy. As a grandmother of a newly adopted boy, like a bud on nearly every aspect, this book touched my heart deeply. Bud, at least, the mother worships him and does everything to take care of him. This gave Bado a massive "hope" that is not the case for many of today's children who find themselves in a system that can not protect them or can not protect them. I showed lots of the same nature as our latest family in Bud, cried out of the buds, laughed and cheered. This book is "must read" if you want to know how it feels like being a child loved and wanted to be taken care of.