Flora & Ulysses

Flora & Ulysses
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The Illuminated Adventures

مشارکت: عنوان و توضیح کوتاه هر کتاب را ترجمه کنید این ترجمه بعد از تایید با نام شما در سایت نمایش داده خواهد شد.
iran گزارش تخلف

فرمت کتاب

ebook

تاریخ انتشار

2013

Lexile Score

520

Reading Level

1-3

ATOS

4.3

Interest Level

4-8(MG)

نویسنده

K. G. Campbell

ناشر

Candlewick Press

شابک

9780763667245
  • اطلاعات
  • نقد و بررسی
  • دیدگاه کاربران
برنده سال ۲۰۱۴ مدال نیوبری رویداد مقدس پیش بینی نشده! یک کینیک با یک ابرقهرمان غیر محتمل در یک رمان جدید ژانر-breaking توسط استاد داستان سرایی کیت دیکامیلو اشنا میشود. این داستان، به عنوان بهترین داستان های ابرقهرمانی، با یک حادثه غم انگیز شروع می شود که نتایج غیر منتظره ای دارد. سنجاب هرگز دیده که جارو برقی در حال امدن است، اما خود توصیف شده گیاهان بل باکمن، که تمام موضوعات کتاب های کمیک را خوانده است چیزهای وحشتناک می تواند برای شما اتفاق بیفتد! , این درست است که شخص وارد شود و او را نجات دهد چیزی که هیچ‌کدام نمی‌توانند پیش‌بینی کنند این است که اولیس (سنجاب) دوباره متولد شده، با قدرت، پرواز، و شعر غلط‌شده، و فلورا نیز تغییر می‌کند، به عنوان اینکه او می‌بیند که امید و وعده‌ی قلبی خازنی وجود دارد. از #۱ نیویورک تایمز بهترین فروش نویسنده Kate DiCamillo یک داستان بلند خنده دار پر از شخصیت های عجیب و غریب و دوست داشتنی ارائه می دهد و یک فرمت جدید هیجان انگیز است که با دنباله های گرافیکی سبک کمیک و تصاویر تمام صفحه، همه به سیاه و سفید توسط هنرمند جدید و اینده است K. G. Cample.

نقد و بررسی

Publisher's Weekly

Starred review from June 24, 2013
Newbery Medalist DiCamillo and illustrator Campbell meld prose with comics sequences in a broad comedy tinged with sadness. Bitter about her parents’ divorce, Flora Buckman has withdrawn into her favorite comic book,
The Amazing Incandesto! and memorized the advisories in its ongoing bonus feature, Terrible Things Can Happen to You! She puts those life-saving tips into action when a squirrel is swallowed whole by a neighbor’s new vacuum cleaner, the Ulysses Super-Suction Multi-Terrain 2000X. Flora resuscitates the squirrel, christens him after the vacuum, and witnesses a superhero-like transformation: Ulysses is now über-strong, can fly, and composes poetry. Despite supremely quirky characters and dialogue worthy of an SAT prep class, there’s real emotion at the heart of this story involving two kids who have been failed by the most important people in their lives: their parents. It’s into this profound vacuum that Ulysses really flies, demonstrating an unconditional love for his rescuer, trumped only perhaps by his love for food and a desire “to make the letters on the keyboard speak the truth of his heart.” Ages 10–up. Author’s agent: Holly McGhee, Pippin Properties. Illustrator’s agent: Lori Nowicki, Painted Words.



DOGO Books
11037 - Flora and Ulysses is a fun story for anyone to enjoy! Flora, a self-proposed cynic, is living in a boring world. No comic books. No friends. No adventure. So, naturally, when a squirrel is vacuumed up, she gets interested. The squirrel, which Flora named Ulysses, seemed to acquire supernatural powers, such as becoming super strong, typing poetry, and of course -- being really hungry. Very hungry. They set off on a hilarious, comic book style adventure to save Ulysses from the evil Darkness of 10,000 hands -- Flora's own mom, and write poetry along the way. And eat a giant donut. This book has no age limits, for the sheer amount of awesomeness and fun no one can resist!

Kirkus

Starred review from July 1, 2013
When a cynical comic-book fanatic discovers her own superhero, life becomes wonderfully supercharged. Despite the contract her mother made her sign to "turn her face away from the idiotic high jinks of comics," 10-year-old Flora avidly follows her favorite superhero's adventures. Flora's mother writes romance novels and seems more in love with her books than with her lonely ex-husband or equally lonely daughter. When a neighbor accidentally vacuums a squirrel into a Ulysses 2000X vacuum cleaner, Flora resuscitates him into a "changed squirrel," able to lift the 2000X with a single paw. Immediately assuming he's a superhero, Flora names the squirrel "Ulysses" and believes together they will "[shed] light into the darkest corners of the universe." Able to understand Flora, type, compose poetry and fly, the transformed Ulysses indeed exhibits superpowers, but he confronts his "arch-nemesis" when Flora's mother tries to terminate him, triggering a chain of events where Ulysses becomes a real superhero. The very witty text and droll, comic-book-style black-and-white illustrations perfectly relay the all-too-hilarious adventures of Flora, Ulysses and a cast of eccentric characters who learn to believe in the impossible and have "capacious" hearts. Original, touching and oh-so-funny tale starring an endearingly implausible superhero and a not-so-cynical girl. (Fantasy. 8-12)

COPYRIGHT(2013) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.



School Library Journal

Starred review from August 1, 2013

Gr 4-6-Flora, obsessed with superhero comics, immediately recognizes and gives her wholehearted support to a squirrel that, after a near-fatal brush with a vacuum cleaner, develops the ability to fly and type poetry. The 10-year-old hides her new friend from the certain disapproval of her self-absorbed, romance-writer mother, but it is on the woman's typewriter that Ulysses pours out his creations. Like DiCamillo's The Magician's Elephant (Candlewick, 2009), this touching piece of magical realism unfolds with increasing urgency over a mere few days and brings its somewhat caricatured, old-fashioned characters together into what becomes a supportive community for all. Campbell's rounded and gentle soft-penciled illustrations, at times in the form of panel art furthering the action, wonderfully match and add to the sweetness of this oddball story. Rife with marvelously rich vocabulary reminiscent of the early superhero era (e.g., "Holy unanticipated occurrences!") and amusing glimpses at the world from the point of view of Ulysses the supersquirrel, this book will appeal to a broad audience of sophisticated readers. There are plenty of action sequences, but the novel primarily dwells in the realm of sensitive, hopeful, and quietly philosophical literature.-Rhona Campbell, Georgetown Day School, Washington, DC

Copyright 2013 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.



Booklist

Starred review from June 1, 2013
Grades 3-6 *Starred Review* The story begins with a vacuum cleaner. And a squirrel. Or, to be more precise, a squirrel who gets sucked into a Ulysses Super Suction wielded by Flora's neighbor, Mrs. Tickham. The rather hairless squirrel that is spit out is not the same one that went in. That squirrel had only one thought: I'm hungry. After Flora performs CPR, the rescued squirrel, newly named Ulysses, is still hungry, but now he has many thoughts in his head. Foremost is his consideration of Flora's suggestion that perhaps he is a superhero like The Amazing Incandesto, whose comic-book adventures Flora read with her father. (Drawing on comic-strip elements, Campbell's illustrations here work wonderfully well.) Since Flora's father and mother have split up, Flora has become a confirmed and defiant cynic. Yet it is hard to remain a cynic while one's heart is opening to a squirrel who can type ( Squirtl. I am . . . born anew ), who can fly, and who adores Flora. Newbery winner DiCamillo is a master storyteller, and not just because she creates characters who dance off the pages and plots, whether epic or small, that never fail to engage and delight readers. Her biggest strength is exposing the truths that open and heal the human heart. She believes in possibilities and forgiveness and teaches her audience that the salt of life can be cut with the right measure of love. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: DiCamillo has a devoted following, plus this book has an extensive marketing campaign. That equals demand.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2013, American Library Association.)




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