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The Bad Beginning (A Series of Unfortunate Events, Book 1) (Hardcover)
by Lemony Snicket
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Ages 9-12, Archive |
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¥ 138.00
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Author: Lemony Snicket
Publisher: HarperCollins; Rough Cut edition
Pub. in: August, 1999
ISBN: 0064407667
Pages: 162
Measurements: 7.1 x 5.2 x 0.8 inches
Origin of product: USA
Order code: BC00425
Other information: ISBN-13: 978-0064407663
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- MSL Picks -
The world we live in has vast amounts of tragedy in it and unfortunately we encounter lots of nasty characters who might try to do us harm. My criticism of Snicket, and I think it is a strength of the tale as well, is that the story stresses that the Baudelaires have only each other. The children are constantly dismissed when they reach out to adults for assistance, even as their lives are at stake. They are gradually learning (it seems it will become a theme in the series) to not trust others, and the others are always adults. For me, as a young adult it is heartbreaking to realize that children should not reach for help from strange adults, and they must quickly develop the ingenuity to save their own skins in case you might not be their to help them (as the Baudelaire's parents died), or even more tragically, if you ignore them yourself.
While I would like to see fiction foster a world that is always ready to greet children with warm rooms and adults who are excited to learn from them I know that is not representative of the world we live in. So while I wish The Bad Beginning gave us one competent adult who didn't dismiss the children, that is not the case, especially in the welfare system, which is where the Baudelaires find themselves.
One appreciates how Snicket's tales illustrate the sanctuary children have when they defend each other, and actually risk their own lives to help the group. What is also fantastic is the Baudelaires do not act on a whim - Violet (hurray its a girl character) is very interested in science and engineering and she logically invents contraptions that get them out of jams while Klaus's photographic memory retains random pieces of knowledge to help get the plans off the ground.
The Baudelaires camaraderie is refreshing and in a way it exists already in the rebelliousness of youth - how we refuse to get each other in trouble - we'll all take detention rather than rat someone out, the substitute teacher is the common enemy. But wouldn't it be fantastic if it didn't disappear into our adulthood? Then Snicket wouldn't have to tell us the nightmarish tale of the Baudelaires. Because the first adult to hear their story would have put a stop to the anguish they were facing and brought them into fantastic home to nurture Violet's inventions, Klaus's reading, and baby Sunny's biting.
(Quoting from Araby Carlier, USA)
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Lemony Snicket is the author of all 170 chapters in A Series of Unfortunate Events. Despite everything, he is still at large.
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From Publisher
Imagine tales so terrible that as many as fifty million innocents have been ruined by them - tales so indelibly horrid that the New York Times bestseller list has been unable to rid itself of them for seven years. Now imagine if this scourge suddenly became available in a shameful new edition so sensational, so irresistible, so riddled with lurid new pictures that even a common urchin would wish for it. Who among us would be safe?
Begin at the beginning - evenif it is a bad one - with the first in A Series of Unfortunate Events, now even more disposable in paperback!
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Amazon.com (MSL quote), USA
<2008-02-15 00:00>
Make no mistake. The Bad Beginning begins badly for the three Baudelaire children, and then gets worse. Their misfortunes begin one gray day on Briny Beach when Mr. Poe tells them that their parents perished in a fire that destroyed their whole house. "It is useless for me to describe to you how terrible Violet, Klaus, and even Sunny felt in the time that followed," laments the personable (occasionally pedantic) narrator, who tells the story as if his readers are gathered around an armchair on pillows. But of course what follows is dreadful. The children thought it was bad when the well-meaning Poes bought them grotesque-colored clothing that itched. But when they are ushered to the dilapidated doorstep of the miserable, thin, unshaven, shiny-eyed, money-grubbing Count Olaf, they know that they--and their family fortune- are in real trouble. Still, they could never have anticipated how much trouble. While it's true that the events that unfold in Lemony Snicket's novels are bleak, and things never turn out as you'd hope, these delightful, funny, linguistically playful books are reminiscent of Roald Dahl (remember James and the Giant Peach and his horrid spinster aunts), Charles Dickens (the orphaned Pip in Great Expectations without the mysterious benefactor), and Edward Gorey (The Gashlycrumb Tinies). There is no question that young readers will want to read the continuing unlucky adventures of the Baudelaire children in The Reptile Room and The Wide Window. (Ages 9 and older) -Karin Snelson
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Publishers Weekly (MSL quote), USA
<2008-02-15 00:00>
"If you are interested in stories with happy endings, you would be better off reading some other book." So cautions Snicket, the exceedingly well-mannered narrator of these two witty mock-gothic novels featuring the misadventures of 14-year-old Violet, 12-year-old Klaus and infant Sunny Baudelaire. From the first, things look unfortunate indeed for the trio: a fire destroys their home, killing their parents along with it; the executor of their parents' estate, the obtuse Mr. Poe (with a son, Edgar), ignores whatever the children have to say; and their new guardian, Count Olaf, is determined to get his hands on the Baudelaire fortune. But by using their individual gifts (Violet's for inventing, Klaus's for reading and researching and baby Sunny's for biting) the three enterprising children thwart the Count's planAfor now. The author uses formal, Latinate language and intrusive commentary to hilarious effect, even for readers unfamiliar with the literary conventions he parodies. The peril in which he places the Baudelaires may be frightening (Count Olaf actually follows through on his threats of violence on several occasions), but the author paints the satire with such broad strokes that most readers will view it from a safe distance. Luckily for fans, the woes of the Baudelaires are far from over; readers eager for more misfortune can turn to The Reptile Room, for an even more suspenseful tale. Exquisitely detailed drawings of Gothic gargoyles and mischievous eyes echo the contents of this elegantly designed hardcover. Age 9-up. (Sept.)
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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Library Journal (MSL quote), USA
<2008-02-15 00:00>
Grade 4-6-This series chronicles the unfortunate lives of the Baudelaire children: Violet, 14; Klaus, 12; and the infant, Sunny. In Bad Beginning, their parents and possessions perish in a fire, and the orphans must use their talents to survive as their lives move from one disastrous event to another. Surrounded by dim-witted though well-meaning adults, the Baudelaires find themselves in the care of their evil relative, Count Olaf, a disreputable actor whose main concern is getting his hands on the children's fortune. When Olaf holds Sunny hostage to force Violet to marry him, it takes all of the siblings' resourcefulness to outwit him. Violet's inventive genius, Klaus's forte for research, and Sunny's gift for biting the bad guys at opportune moments save the day. However, the evil Count escapes, only to return in The Reptile Room just as the children are settling into a far more pleasant life with their new guardian, Uncle Monty, who is promptly murdered by Olaf and his cohorts. Though the villain escapes again, and beloved Uncle Monty is dead, the children are safe...for now. While the misfortunes hover on the edge of being ridiculous, Snicket's energetic blend of humor, dramatic irony, and literary flair makes it all perfectly believable. The writing, peppered with fairly sophisticated vocabulary and phrases, may seem daunting, but the inclusion of Snicket's perceptive definitions of difficult words makes these books challenging to older readers and excellent for reading aloud.
Linda Bindner, formerly at Athens Clarke County Library, GA Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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AudioFile (MSL quote), USA
<2008-02-15 00:00>
[Editor's Note: The follwing is a combined review with THE REPTILE ROOM.]--The three Baudelaire orphans, Violet, Klaus, and Sunny, have recently joined the world of children's literature made hospitable by a wizard named Harry. Their miserable lives, an unrelenting series of catastrophes, have become the source of grins and giggles among elementary and middle-grade readers. And who better to read the serialized melodrama than the multitalented Tim Curry, master of multiple voices and deadpan delivery? Fabulously funny, the first two volumes afford Curry, as the deeply sorrowful, omniscient narrator, an opportunity to display his enormous talents - in Mr. Poe's chronic, wheezing cough; Sunny's squawking, incomprehensible gibberish; Count Olaf's sinister and malevolent arch villainy; and Uncle Monty's lisp. An added bonus on The Bad Beginning is a wildly funny interview between Leonard Marcus and Daniel Handler (who is actually suspected to be the author, Lemony Snicket!) that will have kids longing for more. To extend the fun, each audiobook is decked out with an appropriate theme song by the Gothic Archies. Listeners should be prepared to settle in for some serious frivolity! T.B. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award. © AudioFile 2001, Portland, Maine- Copyright © AudioFile, Portland, Maine -This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title. |
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