Kabungo
- Publisher
- Groundwood Books Ltd
- Initial publish date
- Apr 2016
- Category
- Friendship, Halloween, Humorous Stories
- Recommended Age
- 7 to 10
- Recommended Grade
- 2 to 5
- Recommended Reading age
- 7 to 10
-
Hardback
- ISBN
- 9781554988044
- Publish Date
- Apr 2016
- List Price
- $14.95
-
eBook
- ISBN
- 9781554988068
- Publish Date
- Apr 2016
- List Price
- $7.99
Classroom Resources
Where to buy it
Description
Ten-year-old Beverly is an ordinary girl with an extraordinary best friend. Her name is Kabungo, and she lives in a cave on Main Street. No one knows where she comes from or who she really is, but life is never dull when Kabungo is around.
Beverly tries to teach her friend about the ways of the modern world — the importance of teeth brushing, understanding strange holidays like Halloween, learning how to read. But Kabungo doesn’t take well to being civilized, and she can be stubborn, bossy, and plain infuriating. Sometimes Beverly gets so mad that she just wants to move to Cincinnati.
Besides, Kabungo is a skittish cavegirl, and it takes a while to win her trust, even among Star City’s eccentric denizens, such as Mr. Gobshaw, who owns the local drug shop (“We have everything!”) where you’ll find the stuffed tigers right next to the breath mints. And there is Ms. VeDore, who seems to float as she walks around her decrepit mansion, and who throws the most amazing Halloween parties.
Then, just when you least expect it, Kabungo will do something surprising (and when you’re best friends with a cavegirl, you’re not easily surprised). Like planning an unexpected birthday treat for Beverly (even though it isn’t actually her birthday) — at the city dump.
In other words, Beverly learns that there are times for teaching, and times for tipping your head back and laughing.
Hilarious and poignant, Kabungo is the most originally voiced and endearing middle-grade heroine since Pippi Longstocking. Accompanied by quirky line drawings by Milan Pavlovic, this is a gently humorous novel about friendship and community that raises for young readers deeper questions about finding beauty in unexpected places, accepting and celebrating differences, and what it really means to be civilized.
About the authors
Rolli is a writer, illustrator and cartoonist. He is the author of two short-story collections (I Am Currently Working on a Novel and God’s Autobio), two books of poems (Mavor’s Bones: A Gothic Novel in Poems and Plum Stuff), a middle-grade story collection (Dr. Franklin’s Staticy Cat and Other Unbelievable Tales) and the forthcoming novel, The Sea-Wave (Guernica, 2016). He is the recipient of the John Kenneth Galbraith Literary Award, and his cartoons appear regularly in Reader’s Digest, Harvard Business Review, Barron’s, The Chronicle of Higher Education, Adbusters, The Oldie and Prospect.
Rolli lives in Regina.
Milan Pavlovic lives in Toronto with his family. When he is not illustrating picture books, drawing or playing the ukulele, he is teaching visual communication and illustration at OCAD University and Seneca College. His many other books include Son of Happy by Cary Fagan, The Boy Who Invented the Popsicle by Anne Renaud, Moon Wishes by Guy and Patricia Storms, Seamus’s Short Story by Heather Hartt-Sussman (“The illustrations, in rich watercolor and colored pencil, are elegantly patterned —School Library Journal, starred review) and The Snuggly by Glen Huser.
Awards
- Winner, Joan Betty Stuchner — Oy Vey! — Funniest Children's Book Award
Editorial Reviews
Oh my, is this a funny book—and an especially entertaining read-aloud for children.
Kirkus
It's a warm and rewarding account of a very unconventional friendship.
Publishers Weekly
Fresh and original, this appealing account of friendship celebrates differences and community.
Kirkus, STARRED REVIEW
The short episodes would be delicious read-alouds for a lucky school class, especially if the teachers were inclined to ham it up.
Quill & Quire
Rolli has written a witty story . . . It's comical in its word play, likeable in its characters . . . and entertaining in its short stories.
CanLit for Little Canadians Blog