70 pages • 2 hours read
Kate DiCamilloA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more. For select classroom titles, we also provide Teaching Guides with discussion and quiz questions to prompt student engagement.
Because of Winn-Dixie is a middle-grade novel by Kate DiCamillo published in 2000 by Candlewick Books. It follows main character Opal as she learns to love her new home in Naomi, Florida with the help of a stray dog named Winn-Dixie. Steeped in the traditions of Southern literature, the book won a Newbery Honor distinction and a Parents’ Choice Gold Award, among other awards. DiCamillo has been a beloved children's author since publication of Because of Winn Dixie, her debut novel. Her novels Flora and Ulysses (2013) and The Tale of Despereaux (2003) have both won Newbery Awards, The Tiger Rising (2001) won the National Book Award for Young People's literature, and The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane (2006) won the Boston Globe-Horn Book Award for Fiction and Poetry. DiCamillo's other popular works include Beverly, Right Here (2019), Raymie Nightingale (2016), and The Magician's Elephant (2009).
Note on Edition: This guide uses the 2000 edition published by Candlewick Books, in which DiCamillo depicts Opal reading Gone with the Wind to Gloria. In her 2020 Anniversary edition, she changed this book to David Copperfield because of Gone with the Wind’s romanticization of the South and the system of slavery. Ann Patchett notes in the Introduction to the 2020 edition: “Years later, Kate DiCamillo started to think more critically about Gone with the Wind—about its biases and prejudice—and she regretted that she had not given Opal and Gloria Dump a different book to share. She thought, ‘It’s time for things to change’” (DiCamillo, Kate. Because of Winn-Dixie. Candlewick Press, 2020).
Plot Summary
Because of Winn-Dixie opens with Opal adopting Winn-Dixie, the dog that will shape the rest of the book. Opal goes to the Winn-Dixie grocery store for some groceries and discovers a dog running through the aisles. The manager threatens to call the pound, and Opal feels bad for the dog—she claims him, names him after the grocery store, and takes him home to the trailer park where she lives with her father, whom she calls “the preacher.”
Opal is struggling with life in the trailer park. Opal’s mother left when she was a baby, and the preacher rarely talks about her. Opal had to leave her friends behind when they left their old town of Whately, and now she is especially lonely. Early in the novel, the preacher tells Opal 10 things about her mother, and Opal thinks of her mother often throughout the book, clinging to these memories. The preacher also tells Opal that her mother left because she could not stop drinking, and it was causing problems in their marriage.
Opal is lonely at first, but soon she begins to make some friends. She befriends Miss Franny Block, the librarian, after Miss Franny mistakes Winn-Dixie for a bear she met many decades before. Opal also befriends Gloria Dump, a blind older woman who feeds Winn-Dixie peanut butter, and Otis, a musician who works at Gertrude’s Pets. Opal gets a job sweeping the floors at the pet store to pay for a collar and leash for Winn-Dixie.
As the novel progresses, Opal learns a lot about her own pain, and the pain of others. She becomes more empathetic for the children her own age in Naomi, especially Amanda Wilkinson, whose younger brother drowned the year before. Opal becomes forgiving of her mother’s drinking when she discovers Gloria Dump’s mistake tree, full of whiskey bottles she emptied before she stopped drinking. At the end of the novel, Opal throws a party to celebrate her new friends and help everyone feel happy. Winn-Dixie gets lost during a surprise thunderstorm at the party, but Otis saves the day when his beautiful music coaxes Winn-Dixie out of his hiding spot. After the storm, Opal visits the mistake tree to talk to her mother, saying that she is happy with the preacher, and that she will not miss her mother so much anymore.
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By Kate DiCamillo