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The Vile Village by Lemony Snicket

By Josie Brown | Posted Under Book Reviews | Comments (18)



LemonySnicket1.jpg

After the Harry Potter series ended, I was looking around for books with a similar feel to them. My aunt was a Reader’s Assistant at the Boulder Public Library at the time, and she recommended “the Lemony Snicket” books, which sounded like a joke, but since she’s rarely wrong, I went out and bought Book the First, The Bad Beginning. It was in the Children’s section, and it was short. I will take a moment here to congratulate the author and everyone else involved in the design of the book for its lovely, quality bindings with ripped-edge pages and sturdy board-and-cloth construction. It’s nice to see any book — much less a childrens’ book — bound really, truly well.

I waited until now to write about these because none of the books previously have topped the 200 page requirement (plus the pages are small, so it really would have felt like cheating), but I’ve read through book seven at this point and I cannot recommend the series heartily enough. I particularly like the tone of the books, which is lighthearted but still doesn’t pull any punches for younger readers. The stories follow the tragic misfortunes of a trio of orphans and do not shy away from admitting that yeah, it’s really sad that bad things happen to nice people and that there are bad people in the world. Moreover, Snicket does not dumb down the vocabulary for kids. I always think this is the best policy — baby talk is quite frankly a disservice to children, as they need adult speech to develop their own language patterns and vocabulary; you don’t need to be quoting Plato to two year olds, but you don’t need to be using non-verbal babble with them either — and Snicket has a good handle on it. When he wants to use a big word, he goes for it and explains it in a way that gives context for it, which I think makes the meaning clearer than can a dictionary definition.

The Baudelaire orphans’ parents died in a house fire while they were at the nearby beach, and since then, they have been in the care of an inept banker named Mr. Poe. (I’m sure that by now I need not mention that these books are rife with literary references.) The orphans will come into a vast fortune once they come of age, but until then, Mr. Poe is tasked with finding them a place to stay. In The Bad Beginning, they are placed with their odious uncle, Count Olaf, who after putting the children to work in his disgusting house attempts to trick the oldest child, Violet, into marrying him and thus getting around the age requirement for the inheritance. Through the combined wit of Violet (an inventor), Klaus (an avid reader) and Sunny (a baby who is fond of biting things), the three Baudelaires escape. Unfortunately, they are escaping to a string of similarly disastrous placements that Mr. Poe comes up with, and are chased at every turn by Count Olaf, who disguises himself as a variety of characters to get near the orphans and their incompetent guardians.

Lemony Snicket is the narrator, and what gets really interesting is the way the Baudelaire children’s story begins to blend into Snicket’s own. At this point in the stories, it’s beginning to be clear that Snicket is more than a guardian and transmittor of the kids’ story and in fact is involved himself. This adds a wonderful amount of depth to the tale, and is way more interesting than many kids’ books.

I have read through book seven and anxiously await the arrival of book eight. I think any parent should consider these, not only for their kids but for themselves, and even if you’re kidless, you’ll enjoy the hell out of these. They’re wonderful, inventive books with great imagery, terrific characters and unique depth. Each book comes in a nice little compact size, too, so it’s perfect for trips or the beach or rides into work on the train. Do yourself a favor and pick a bunch of them up, or even better, buy the boxed set. It’s only 95 bucks (each book costs about $11 anyway, and there are 13 of them, so it’s pretty much highway robbery to get the box set), and I guarantee you’ll want to rip through the whole series.

This review is part of the Cannonball Read series. You can read more of Josie Brown’s reviews at her blog, The Outlaw Josie Brown









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Comments

OH, I love, love, LOVE A Series of Unfortunate Events. I love that there are 13 of them. I absolutely adore the way Handler Snicket handled the vocabulary. Plus, the stories themselves are so engaging. I can't wait to start reading them with my niece. (Too bad she's only 5 and I've probably got a couple of years before we can...) At least I can re-read them in the meantime.

Posted by: Anna von Beaverplatz at July 24, 2009 8:55 AM

Oops. P.S. Nicely written, Josie.

Posted by: Anna von Beaverplatz at July 24, 2009 8:59 AM

I felt the same way about these books until I read the last two. You should write another review after you've finished the entire series - it will be interesting to see if your opinion changes.

Posted by: Three-nineteen at July 24, 2009 9:00 AM

I ADORE these books. The literary allusions, the narrator's voice, the vocabulary fun... They're a dream come true for anyone who's fond of the English language.

The last two books are far from the strongest, but I still enjoyed the journey immensely, and somewhere around book 6 or 7, I realized that the series could never come to a fully satisfying ending. There was just too much going on.

Posted by: Alice at July 24, 2009 9:19 AM

I cannot praise A Series of Unfortunate Events highly enough. These books are incredible from start to finish and I'm constantly rereading them and finding little clues that I missed the first time around. I'd have to say The Grim Grotto and Penultimate Peril are my favorites.

For fans of the series I highly recommend the accompanying books, Lemony Snicket's Unauthorized Autobiography and The Beatrice Letters. They reveal a lot of secrets about the children and Lemony Snicket.

Posted by: Penelope at July 24, 2009 9:41 AM

I started reading this series to my daughter. A chapter a night. She learned to read and decided to read them herself without waiting for me. She finished them in short order. I had forgotten all about them since then, but now I think I will re-visit them and finish the series, they really are fantastic books.

Posted by: Eyvi at July 24, 2009 9:48 AM

A Series of Unfortunate Events is one of my favorite kids' series. I used to read to my daughter every night, and there is so much complete dreck out there, that things like ASoUE really saved my sanity.

Posted by: Wednesday at July 24, 2009 9:54 AM

I love these books. I just wished they kept making the movies. It would have been so much better than the potter movies.

Posted by: sara at July 24, 2009 10:51 AM

@ Sara: I heard a rumour that Brad Silberling (spelling?), the director of the first Lemony Snicket movie, is considering a sequel - in stop-motion.

A rumour, though.

I love Lemony Snicket. :D I think my favourite is Book 5 (The Austere Academy) because that's where the VFD mystery really started.
I love the literary allusions and how it's so incredibly layered that you get more out of it every time you reread the series. I love how the mystery gradually unfolds, I love how the Baudelaires gradually get more into a murky grey shade instead of just pure goodness, and how Count Olaf makes the opposite journey into, well, not a good person but at least a pityable one (aww in Book 13...). And I don't love how the mysteries aren't wrapped up in the end, but then ASoUE is all about disappointing sad ends and not getting what you want, isn't it?

And yes, do check out The Unauthorized Autobiography and The Beatrice Letters if you're more interested in Lemony and Beatrice!

Posted by: Linda at July 24, 2009 10:59 AM

I asked someone at work once about these books and she said they were "okay" but I should check out Spiderwick Chronicles instead. At the time, I was working at a company that produced packaging for General Mills products and I saw a lot of cereal boxes with the Spiderwick movie advertised on it, and it didn't seem that appealing to me. So I never read it. Or Lemony Snicket. Basically advertising kills books so I don't eat Cheerios any more.

Posted by: annoyingmouse at July 24, 2009 11:08 AM

Have you guys seen the film? It was excellent. Beautiful cinematography, wonderful humor, great acting and it really captured the spirit of the first three books. I just wish the movie had been successful enough that they had made more.

Posted by: Gigi at July 24, 2009 1:08 PM

I never finished this series--I think I got to book 10 or 11. That was how many I read to the older kids at the daycare I worked at a few summers ago. There was one girl who loved them so much she would make me keep reading until I complained that I was tired and took a nap with the rest of the kids. But I was always happy to keep reading. The books are hilarious.

Posted by: kelsy at July 24, 2009 1:36 PM

i was OBSESSED with these books when i was younger. my fifth-grade claim to fame was the fact that i'd come first runner-up in a lemony snicket caption contest (which has unfortunately been erased from the interwebs).

still, though, it was pretty cool.

Posted by: marebear at July 24, 2009 2:21 PM

Oh, I didn't know Christopher Lloyd was in these movies. Look, he hasn't aged since Back to the Future!

(I'm only half kidding.)

Posted by: ziggy at July 24, 2009 9:09 PM

My children are 8 and 7 and these books scared the crap out of them. We've read other books that are dark, like The Tales of Despereaux (which you should go out and read right now - that crap movie that used the same name should be banished). I think this book was too hard for them because there are NO safe adults. They are either corrupt or inept. However, I completely agree that they are very good literature and I look forward to when my children are a little older and we can continue on in the series.

Posted by: Mattie at July 25, 2009 12:25 AM

My son & I loved these books and read up to about book 8 when that abomination of a movie with Jim Carey came out. I knew from the day I first heard that he had been cast as Count Olaf that the movie was going to suck slough water and unfortunately my son could never get back into the books or the characters after Carey's smarmy, scenery chewing performance.A word to all aspiring children's authors (or authors of any kind) please PLEASE don't sell the movie rights to Hollywood!

Posted by: Brite at July 25, 2009 10:21 AM

I love everything about the Lemony Snicket Books.

I love the way they skew and twist the series paradigms like Nancy Drew and the Boxcar Children, where adults rescue and fix everything in the end. I LIKE that the adults are basically evil, inept or both, and the children just keep finding a way to survive.

I love the wordplay, the imagery, the assertion of science above the superficial.

I love the sibling reltionships. Love makes a family. And sharp baby teeth.

Posted by: Stacy D at July 25, 2009 10:50 AM

I read the entire series, but it ended in a whimper instead of the bang that I was expecting...I felt like it just trailed off at the end. I know that every story doesn't have to have a clear cut ending, but after reading through 13 books, I was looking for something more than what was delivered.

Posted by: DaveKan at July 27, 2009 12:27 PM