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Question: Who's the author that wrote the kids' book "Up Chuck" or "What's Up Chuck"!?
Best Answer - Chosen by Asker:
UpChuck and the Rotten willie is by Bill WallceWww@QuestionHome@Com

http://www!.amazon!.com
I don't find any books by that ambiguous name in the children's book section at Amazon, where there are hundreds of thousands of titles!.

Here is what I did find:
--Chuck Close Up Close by Jan Greenberger and Sandra Jordan; five star reviews!. About a very good artist who had to overcome many childhood difficulties and work through disabilities to make the great portraits pictured in this book!.
--Lucky Chuck by Beverly Cleary and J!. Winslow Higginbottom; a boy and his motorcycle; five start reviews!.
--The Adventures of Johnny Chuck by Thornton W!. Burgess, also with five star reviews; appears to be about nature!.
--and author Chuck Murphy writes a lot of great-looking pop-up books!.

You can look at all the books listed, plus many more, through the 'Search Inside' feature at this site, done by clicking on the book a couple of times!. If you scroll down after that is done, you'll eventually see the reviews to read!.
Once you have a title going, check the left column to narrow your search to children's books!. Be sure you're in the Books category first; I have landed in 'Beauty' by error so many times it's become funny!.Www@QuestionHome@Com

Bill Wallace wrote several books about a cat called Upchuck - "Upchuck and the Rotten Willy"
http://www!.amazon!.com/Upchuck-Rotten-Wil!.!.!.
"From Wallace (True Friends, 1994, etc!.), a tale of interspecies friendship!. Chuck the cat is lonely!. His best friend, Tom, has moved away with his owners; another friend, Louie, was killed by a car; and Chuck's owner has gone off to college!. Trapped on a tree branch for two days and nights by the poodles who moved into Tom's house, he is rescued by a kind-hearted rottweiler, Willy, who feeds and warms him before sending him back home!. This tale, warmed by the patience of Willy, who perseveres in the face of feline prejudice, is told completely from the animals' perspective: They understand human language but can't read it or speak it!. With the exception of Willy, it is not a particularly nice world; cats torment dogs, dogs--in turn--attempt to do cats in,!.!.!."Www@QuestionHome@Com