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A Series of Unfortunate Events #1

袧械褖邪褋褌薪芯褌芯 薪邪褔邪谢芯

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袦懈谢懈 褔懈褌邪褌械谢懈, 小褗褋 褋褗卸邪谢械薪懈械 褌褉褟斜胁邪 写邪 胁懈 锌褉械写褍锌褉械写褟, 褔械 褌邪蟹懈 泻薪懈谐邪 械 懈蟹胁褗薪褉械写薪芯 薪械锌褉懈褟褌薪邪. 袙 薪械褟 褖械 芯褌泻褉懈械褌械 薪械褉邪写芯褋褌薪邪褌邪 懈褋褌芯褉懈褟 薪邪 褌褉懈 屑薪芯谐芯 薪械褖邪褋褌薪懈 写械褑邪. 袙褗锌褉械泻懈 褔械 褋邪 芯褔邪褉芯胁邪褌械谢薪懈 懈 褍屑薪懈, 卸懈胁芯褌褗褌 薪邪 袙邪泄褗谢械褌, 袣谢邪褍褋 懈 小褗薪懈 袘芯写谢械褉 械 锌褗谢械薪 褋褗褋 褋褌褉邪写邪薪懈褟 懈 屑褗泻懈. 袨褖械 芯褌 锌褗褉胁懈褌械 褋褌褉邪薪懈褑懈 薪邪 泻薪懈谐邪褌邪 - 泻芯谐邪褌芯 褌褉懈屑邪褌邪 褋邪 薪邪 锌谢邪卸邪 懈 薪邪褍褔邪胁邪褌 褍卸邪褋薪邪褌邪 薪芯胁懈薪邪 - 褌邪 褔邪泻 写芯 泻褉邪褟, 斜械写懈褌械 谐懈 写械斜薪邪褌 薪邪 胁褋褟泻邪 泻褉邪褔泻邪. 效芯胁械泻 斜懈 褉械泻褗谢, 褔械 写械褑邪褌邪 袘芯写谢械褉 褋邪 屑邪谐薪懈褌懈 蟹邪 薪械胁芯谢褟褌邪.
袛芯褉懈 懈 胁 泻褉邪褌泻邪 懈褋褌芯褉懈褟 泻邪褌芯 褌邪蟹懈 谐懈 褋锌芯谢懈褌邪褌 泻邪泻胁懈 谢懈 薪械 蟹谢芯锌芯谢褍褔懈褟 - 褋褉械褖邪 褋 邪谢褔械薪 懈 锌褉芯褌懈胁械薪 蟹谢芯写械泄, 写褉械褏懈, 泻芯懈褌芯 锌褉懈褔懈薪褟胁邪褌 褋褗褉斜械卸, 蟹邪谐芯胁芯褉 写邪 懈屑 芯褌泻褉邪写薪邪褌 斜芯谐邪褌褋褌胁芯褌芯 懈 褋褌褍写械薪邪 芯胁械褋械薪邪 泻邪褕邪 蟹邪 蟹邪泻褍褋泻邪.
袦芯械 锌械褔邪谢薪芯 蟹邪写褗谢卸械薪懈械 械 写邪 蟹邪锌懈褕邪 褌械褏薪懈褌械 薪械锌褉懈褟褌薪懈 锌褉械卸懈胁械谢懈褑懈, 芯斜邪褔械 薪邪 胁邪褋 薪懈褖芯 薪械 胁懈 锌褉械褔懈 蟹邪褔械褌械褌械 薪械褖芯 胁械褋械谢芯, 邪泻芯 锌褉械写锌芯褔懈褌邪褌械 褌邪泻懈胁邪 懈褋褌芯褉懈懈.

192 pages, Paperback

First published September 30, 1999

6669 people are currently reading
166202 people want to read

About the author

Lemony Snicket

280books26.1kfollowers
Lemony Snicket had an unusual education and a perplexing youth and now endures a despondent adulthood. His previous published works include the thirteen volumes in A Series of Unfortunate Events, The Composer is Dead, and 13 Words. His new series is All The Wrong Questions.

For A Series of Unfortunate Events:


For All The Wrong Questions:

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5 stars
212,821 (38%)
4 stars
190,767 (34%)
3 stars
112,715 (20%)
2 stars
27,681 (4%)
1 star
11,318 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 23,970 reviews
Profile Image for emma.
2,440 reviews85.2k followers
February 8, 2024
YES!!! The least fascinatingly detailed book in my favorite series! It just keeps getting better and better, folks.



So, for the three misguided people who haven鈥檛 read this series - first off, get ON THAT. What are you doing? There is nothing so important in your life that you can鈥檛 put it off in order to read this series.



Second, we follow the Baudelaires - Violet, Klaus, and Sunny - through what can only be Very Foreseeably Described as a series of unfortunate events. I can鈥檛 put it better than Lemony Snicket himself, so I鈥檒l just shoehorn in his words: Within these pages, 鈥渢he three youngsters encounter a greedy and repulsive villain, itchy clothing, a disastrous fire, a plot to steal their fortune, and cold porridge for breakfast.鈥�



So the things about these books...the setting is amazing. Lemony Snicket creates this almost-reality wherein even the smallest, most mundane occurrence is Veritably Fixed & Deliberate.

This phenomenon becomes more and more clear as the series progresses, which is why the first book is the worst one. (Or maybe the last one is, depending on how many questions it answers.) None of these sneaky, behind the scenes things are a Visibly Forceful Development in the first book, so it鈥檚 not as fun.

But I loved this series so much in my childhood. Lemony Snicket taught me the power of books, and of words. Most stuff, when you鈥檙e a kid, makes you feel like anything you could do would be nothing more than a Viciously Futile Diversion. But I have vivid memories of being a fairly small child and intensely poring over the pages of these books, looking for clues and ways to help the Baudelaires and, as this book says, 鈥渢he people who liked them.鈥� And I felt like I was doing something, even if it was fictional.

I have Lemony Snicket to thank for a lot of things.



Anyway. I鈥檓 getting almost...dare I say鈥�emotional, so I鈥檓 going to wrap this up. These books are funny, exciting, dark, and teeming with clues and Easter eggs for those who care to look. On top of it all, the TV series is a pitch-perfect adaptation, and if you ask me about the movie I鈥檒l look you right in the eye (but not actually) and ask what movie you鈥檙e talking about.



Man, I love these books. I could reread them every year and never get bored. (I know this because of a very scientific process wherein I reread them pretty much every year.)

Bottom line: READ IT READ IT READ IT READ IT READ IT READ IT READ IT READ IT READ IT!!!!




The world is quiet here.
Profile Image for Jesse (JesseTheReader).
569 reviews184k followers
Read
January 12, 2017
*I'm not going to rate this, because I've already read this book & stand by my first rating of it.

I adore this story so much & I'm so happy that I took the time to re-read it. It made me feel SO nostalgic reading it. I can't wait for the netflix series!!
Profile Image for Mark Lawrence.
Author听89 books55.2k followers
December 24, 2024
I'm reading through this series with my daughter Celyn (10 years old, very disabled, hence Dad does the reading).

Edit: Finished & reviewed all 13!

So, this is a clever, entertaining book set in a world like ours but populated with bizarre characters and with distinctly dark undercurrents.

Recurring themes throughout the series are:

i) Adults are mindbogglingly stupid.

ii) The narrator, Lemony Snicket, is a character we glimpse in tantalising snatches.

iii) Words that stretch a child's vocabulary are used regularly but defined in context (by the narrator) in an amusing way.

iv) The three siblings, Violet (14), Klaus (12), and Sunny (1) will use their singular talents (respectively inventor/bookworm/biter) to solve the problem.

v) That problem will be Count Olaaf

The book (like Roald Dahl's work) succeeds with a combination of wit, slapstick, and malice.

Short, very readable, will leave you wanting the next.

This one sets the scene, rapidly orphaning the children, establishing the goal (to survive long enough to take control of their huge inheritance), and their adversary (Count Olaaf and his theatre troop of sinister villains).

We have ten of the books because my elder children loved them when they were young. On book 5 I'm thinking we'll probably read them all.

EDIT: I have now posted reviews of all 13 books in the series - check them out!







...
Profile Image for Federico DN.
925 reviews3,577 followers
March 25, 2023
SADNESS GALORE.

Violet, Klaus and Sunny are the pride and joy of their wealthy lovely parents, the Baudelaire. They all live merrily at an enormous mansion in the coastal city of Briny Beach. Until one sad day a fire destroys their beautiful home and burns everything in it, including their parents. The Baudelaire orphans, the embodiment of misfortune, must now face an uncertain future full of painfully sad moments. This is the beginning of a series. A series of unfortunate events.

This book specifically warns from the start that this is a sad story. Innocent me, I thought this was going to be haha sad, funny sad; but no, this is just sad. This is pure sadness. This is so fucking sad! What the hell is wrong with you Lemony? And I have twelve more books of crushing sadness to go through? YOU SICK TWISTED FUCK!

I have to admire the writer鈥檚 capacity to make me hate and love something so much in so few pages. LOVED the Baudelaire siblings, and their group strength and resilience to face all the crappy things that befalls them. Took me only two chapters to HATE Count Olaf with all my mangled heart. And I need more Justice Strauss please. I鈥檓 hoping for a diamond incrusted rainbow at the end of the series or else... Then again I must admit this book also specifically warns there is no happy ending at the end of this story; but I don鈥檛 care, I鈥檓 holding on to my little ray of hope. Fuck you Lemony. You are not bringing me down. YOU HEAR ME YOU SICK BASTARD??? You are not bringing me down!!

-----------------------------------------------
PERSONAL NOTE :
[1999] [176p] [Fiction] [3.5] [Recommendable] [Justice Strauss <3] [Die Olaf DIE!] [Tsunami of sadness] [I need a new heart] [Please make the pain stop] [Pardon my french!]
-----------------------------------------------

鈽呪槄鈽呪槄鈽� 1. The Bad Beginning [3.5]
鈽呪槄鈽呪槄鈽� 2. The Reptile Room [3.5]
鈽呪槄鈽呪槅鈽� 3. The Wide Window
鈽呪槄鈽嗏槅鈽� 4. The Miserable Mill [2,5]
鈽呪槄鈽呪槄鈽� 5. The Austere Academy [4.5]
鈽呪槄鈽呪槅鈽� 6. The Ersatz Elevator
鈽呪槄鈽呪槄鈽� 7. The Vile Village
鈽呪槅鈽嗏槅鈽� 8. The Hostile Hospital
鈽呪槄鈽呪槅鈽� 9. The Carnivorous Carnival [3.5]
鈽呪槄鈽呪槅鈽� 10. The Slippery Slope [3.5]
鈽呪槄鈽呪槄鈽� 11. The Grim Grotto
鈽呪槄鈽呪槅鈽� 12. The Penultimate Peril [3.5]
鈽呪槄鈽呪槄鈽� 13. The End
鈽呪槄鈽呪槄鈽� 14. The Complete Wreck

-----------------------------------------------

TRISTEZA EN ABUNDACIA.

Violet, Klaus y Sunny son el orgullo y alegr铆a de sus amorosos y acaudalados padres, los Baudelaire. Todos viven felizmente en una enorme mansi贸n en la costera ciudad de Briny Beach. Hasta que un triste d铆a un incendio destruye su hermoso hogar y quema todo en ella, incluyendo sus padres. Los hu茅rfanos Baudelaire, la encarnaci贸n del infortunio, deben enfrentar ahora un futuro incierto lleno de dolorosamente tristes momentos. Este es el comienzo de una serie. Una serie de eventos desafortunados.

Este libro espec铆ficamente advierte desde el inicio que 茅sta es una historia triste. Inocente yo, pens茅 que iba a ser jaja triste, triste gracioso; pero no, esto es s贸lo triste. Esto es pura tristeza. 隆Esto es tan malditamente triste! 驴Cu谩l demonios es tu problema Lemony? 驴Y tengo doce libros m谩s de aplastante tristeza que sobrepasar? 隆MALDITO ENFERMO RETORCIDO!

Tengo que admirar la capacidad del autor para hacerme amar y odiar tanto sobre algo en tan escasas p谩ginas. AME los hermanos Baudelaire, y su fortleza grupal y resiliencia para enfrentar todas las desgraciadas cosas que les suced铆an. Me tom贸 s贸lo un par de cap铆tulos para ODIAR a Olaf con todo mi magullado coraz贸n. Y necesito m谩s Justice Strauss por favor. Estoy esperado por un arcoriris incrustado de diamantes al final de esta serie o sino... Aun as铆 debo admitir que este libro tambi茅n espec铆ficamente advierte que no hay un final feliz al final de esta historia; pero no me importa, voy a aferrarme a mi rayito de esperanza. Vete al demonio Lemony. No me vas a hacer caer. 驴ME OYES BASTARDO ENFERMO? 隆隆No me vas a hacer caer!!

-----------------------------------------------
NOTA PERSONAL :
[1999] [176p] [Ficci贸n] [3.5] [Recomendable] [Justice Strauss <3] [Mu茅rete Olaf MUERETE!] [Tsunami de tristeza] [Necesito un nuevo coraz贸n] [Por favor detengan el dolor] [Perd贸n por mi franc茅s!]
-----------------------------------------------
Profile Image for Caz (littlebookowl).
304 reviews39.3k followers
August 3, 2015
For some reason I had the sudden urge to re-read these books... so I decided to start listening to them on audiobook!
I have the 11th book in a physical copy, but I will eventually be picking the rest of them up as well.
Profile Image for Mischenko.
1,023 reviews95 followers
March 24, 2019
Up until now, the three Baudelaire children have lived a fairly lavish life, until a raging fire burns through their home with their parents inside. Their deaths are suspicious and nobody really knows how the fire started in the first place. Now they have nothing left and Mr. Poe must find a relative that鈥檚 willing to take on the responsibility of caring for them.

鈥淢r. Poe opened his mouth to say something, but erupted into a brief fit of coughing. 鈥淚 have made arrangements,鈥� he said finally, 鈥渇or you to be raised by a distant relative of yours who lives on the other side of town. His name is Count Olaf.鈥�

When the children are delivered to their new caretaker (Count Olaf), their hope is that their life will take a turn for the better. However, it seems that Count Olaf鈥檚 only interest is gaining their family fortune and the Baudelaire children must find a way to protect themselves from his nasty schemes.



There were comical parts in the book and surely the whole story isn鈥檛 just bad events happening to the children. I felt that there were positive aspects too. I personally admired how the children stood together and had each other鈥檚 back. They鈥檙e intelligent kids鈥揺ffective problem solvers鈥揳nd make the best out of the predicament they鈥檙e in. Also, there are many important messages about family, trust, embracing what you have and making the best of it. For me, the biggest takeaway was that justice and life in general don鈥檛 always work in our favor as the adults who are supposed to be the protectors make one mistake after another in this book. It鈥檚 enough to drive one mad and reminded me of how crazy things can get when deranged people have power and control over others, especially children.



I enjoyed the writing and thought it was really easy to follow. We loved the illustrations, but found ourselves wanting more because there aren鈥檛 that many and mainly just at the beginning of each chapter. There are frequent new vocabulary words introduced for children to learn and I appreciated the addition of them with thorough explanations.

鈥淚t is very useful, when one is young, to learn the difference between 鈥渓iterally鈥� and 鈥渇iguratively.鈥� If something happens literally, it actually happens; if something happens figuratively, it feels like it is happening.

If you are literally jumping for joy, for instance, it means you are leaping in the air because you are very happy. If you are figuratively jumping for joy, it means you are so happy that you could jump for joy, but are saving your energy for other matters.鈥�


The ending is left wide-open for the second book, The Reptile Room. I鈥檓 really looking forward to starting the next book and reading this whole series. My plan is to read them all with my kids before we start the Netflix series.

4****

You can see all my reviews@
Profile Image for Mohammed Arabey.
713 reviews6,460 followers
August 5, 2017
We have in Egypt this saying;
"Who sees the Unfortunate Events of others feel solace about his own Unfortunates"
"丕賱賱賷 賷卮賵賮 賲賷爻賮賵乇卮賳鬲 丕賷賮賷賳鬲爻 丕賱賳丕爻 鬲賴賵賳 毓賱賷賴 賲賷爻賮賵乇卮賳鬲賴"
So, 2016 wasn't my year -EST, 2011- and now I'm hitting "rock bottom",having "A Series of Unfortunate Events"

So I said, why not give this title a try

"accompanied by this mysterious black cat that sat with me the whole 2 hours read"

It's really dark-fun Misfortune kids Orphans' story..

And a Gothic villain.

And the author himself, Mr. Lemony Snicket;

who advises you repeatedly that this book is sad and misfortune and not with a happy endings..and please close it or return it if you can't handle all this misfortune..

Even the TV show latest adaptation tells u to just
LOOK AWAY, well... that's true... you should stop reading this review now as well..look for something happier.


BUT as our beloved mother Country saying...which I said earlier, I didn't Look Away.
And that was.....sickly fun.


The Story
-------

The Baudelaire 3 children lost their parents, their huge house and everything they own in a fire... But not their huge bank account.

Mr.Poe, the banker is the one responsible to see them to the 'proper' guardian. Proper here refer to something that never happened.. oh he delivered them to a guardian, but proper is not a suitable word to describe Count Olaf.


Who's has nothing to do with them but plotting to get his hand of their fortune. Which they even can't get their hand on it till the eldest -Violet,14- come of age.

To try to get their fortune. He puts them in a Series of Unfortunate Events.


And by the second half of the Book One.. his first grand plan is to wed Violet by deceive ..


How , how can they know the deceive, how can they escape his plan without endanger their lives??? that's the book one for you.

Oh and no matter what do you think.. the author stick to his word.
No Happy Endings here..

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The Writing Style
-------------

It's really like children book, the style, the easy sentences and even when the author use a big or fancy word he always give the meaning of it even if it's easy in a very funny way. Also he does that in expressions and literature techniques as well.

It's sarcastic and if it's really a children's book..it's the Darkest one ever written.
If you read of Mr. Lemony Snicket's real life you'll feel he's been 'forced' somehow to write a children books.
It's 1999, the phenomenon of Harry Potter was on the catching fire stage.., that's why the result comes like it's a Satire of children books.. Satire here means a dark fun sarcastic imitation of normal life children books.

The creating of the Lemony Snicket constant commentaries through the book as a detective who investigate the Baudelaire orphans' Series and tell this as a story for ether very young readers, or slow ones, that worked as a very funny 'comic relief' amidst all the Misfortune Unfortunate Events Series.

'Comic Relief' here means small funny moments that gets between more tensed or serious ones.

Well..
That's it for a small book reviews. I over talked it I guess.. but I really loved this absurd dark fun of...

Unfortunate Events.

Mohammed Arabey
16 January 2017
To 17 January 2017
Profile Image for Melissa 鈾� Dog/Wolf Lover 鈾� Martin.
3,623 reviews11.4k followers
August 25, 2016
If you are interested in stories with happy endings, you would be better off reading some other book. In this book, not only is there no happy ending, there is no happy beginning and very few happy things in the middle. This is because not very many happy things happened in the lives of the three Baudelaire youngsters. Violet, Klaus, and Sunny Baudelaire were intelligent children, and they were charming, and resourceful, and had pleasant facial features, but they were extremely unlucky, and most everything that happened to them was rife with misfortune, misery, and despair. I'm sorry to tell you this but that is how the story goes.



I am ashamed to say that I have had this 13 book hardback boxset since 2013 and I am just now getting around to it. I put it on one of my challenges for this year but now I'm thinking I might should wait for the tv show on Netflix. I wonder when that is coming out.

***SOME SPOILERS***

These poor kids! They are just having a day of play when they find out their parents die in a fire at their house and they have nothing.

And Mr. Poe who is oblivious and lives in his own little world sends them to life with a distant relative - the evil Count Olaf! All he count wants is the children's money that Violet is to get when she comes of age.

Olaf makes the children do horrible chores, cook, sleep in one bed and the house is atrocious! But the kids do find some peace with the neighbor, Justice Strauss. She lets them cover over and read books from her library. Oh the joy of that =)

But the evil Olaf has a plan to get the money all for himself and he almost succeeds but Violet is a little too smart for old Olaf and I loved it!

I saw the movie for this years ago and I think someone told me it is compiled of the first three books. I thought it was good though. I am really looking forward to the Netflix tv series and the rest of the books!

MY BLOG:
Profile Image for J.G. Keely.
546 reviews12.2k followers
July 28, 2011
So the premise of this book (as the narrator keeps helpfully reminding us) is that this group of three children will continue to have difficult problems to overcome, and every time they succeed in dealing with one problem, another will crop up. In the writing business, this is what's known as 'a plot'.

But then he takes it one step further: in addition to all the difficulties along the way, he assures us that the characters will never break this pattern, and there will be no 'happy ending'. I think this is a good idea, especially in a children's book, because we, as a culture, don't have enough role models for failure.

We have lots of role models for how to behave when we win, but this isn't really very useful--it's not when we win that we most need guidance and aid. We need more examples of how to maintain, how to persevere, in the face of failure.

At this point, our only role models for what to do when we fail are villains, who tend to get angry, yell, whine, take it out on subordinates, and then develop vengeful plans to make everyone feel as bad as they do. The unfortunate result is that people often begin to act like villains when things don't go well, an effect which can be observed most easily by holding a job where you have a boss.

So I'm all for 'no easy wrap ups' at the end of the story, but unfortunately, Snicket is unable to develop a conclusion without this easy route. It takes a very skilled writer to eschew convention and still write something interesting, and his reasons for avoiding standard practices should not be merely to differentiate himself, but to achieve some alternative goal for his story.

There are authors who have achieved this, even in children's fiction--Lewis Carroll and Roald Dahl being the preeminent examples. When Snicket laid out the premise of his books, I began to look for something along the lines of those two authors, who, despite creating stories of children suffering constantly and unfairly, managed to write entertaining, enjoyable stories.

But then those stories were wild and vivid, even when they were dark. Dahl's ability to create grotesque, powerful characters made for dynamic, engrossing stories, while Carroll's quick, fertile mind kept us always guessing, and often laughing, despite Alice's constant frustrations.

Though Snicket is trying for a witty style, he rarely gets there. After the second chapter, all his jokes have already been established, the rest are only minor variations on the same themes. There are no surprising insights to back up his humor, nothing unexpected, just a continuance of the same tone: dry, but not acerbic.

The characters, likewise, show little variance. The vocabulary and speech patterns are all very similar, whether adults, children, villains, or heroes. We are often told of differences in character by the narrator, but these never actually make it into the characters' mouths.

Since the characters are fairly cliche and undifferentiated, Snicket cannot hang the plot on them, like Dahl would. They cannot provide the vibrant impetus for the plot, so Snicket's plot instead becomes a series of convenient (or conveniently inconvenient) events.

The writing itself is not bad, it's mostly just a case of Snicket not being clever or dark enough to buoy his premise. In the end, not much stands out, not the characters, nor the humor.

I applaud his attempt to address difficult and painful issues in his books, and without resorting to basic melodrama, but tragedy is measured by the subject's capacity for pain, so characters must be vivid and deep in order for events to feel truly unfortunate; otherwise, it just becomes the same array of problems common to every plot.
Profile Image for book.olandia.
256 reviews2,486 followers
October 23, 2022
3.5猸愶笍 gdybym by艂a m艂odsza by艂abym zakochana , a teraz jest to dla mnie super rozpocz臋cie serii dzieci臋cej, kt贸r膮 na pewno b臋d臋 kontynuowa艂a!!
5 reviews9 followers
February 26, 2008
When I was a child, I learned a thing or two from reading the works of Roald Dahl. The most important of these lessons is that adults are, more often than not, either evil or oblivious and, to co-opt Lemony Snicket's writing style, by oblivious I mean "lacking conscious awareness; unmindful."

As an adult, I have only received mountains of proof substantiating the notion that adults are either evil or oblivious. All you need to do is watch the news or enter the workforce and you too will realize the same. So it is through this lens of animosity towards grown ups (hey, just become I am one doesn't mean I have to think like one) that I read the first installment of Lemony Snicket's 13-part serial A Series of Unfortunate Events.

Snicket, or his alter ego, seems mighty influenced by Dahl and Edward Gorey. Like the former, most of the adults in the book are worthless. Those who aren't are either dead or somehow taken away from the Baudelaire children. Like the later, bad things keep on happening to our protagonists.

The three Baudelaire children-- Violet, Klaus and Sunny-- live a rather charmed life with parents who love and respect them. Upon an unsupervised excursion to the beach, a fire consumes the Baudelaire home and kills the parents. The three children are taken into the temporary care of Mr. Poe (who has a son named Edgar, by the way) until a relative can be located. After some time, the children are pawned off on Count Olaf, a horrid actor with a title and no money. From the beginning, it is obvious that he has only taken in the children because of the vast fortune they are set to acquire. When he learns that the inheritance will be withheld until Violet is of age, he punishes the children repeatedly. We will stop there, lest I give away the end of this first book.

Aside from a page-turner plot, what works in the book's favor is the language. Snicket uses large grown-up words with the context of child-sized sentences. He defines the words without being condescending and goes on to explain many of the legal concepts that are used throughout the story. The characters are also intriguing. The adults in the story often appear as grotesque figures that make just enough sense to keep the storyline plausible. And, in the grand tradition of children's literature, the Baudelaire orphans are quick-witted and strong-willed.

I found this book as part of a three series boxed set at a thrift store by my house. Each book is small and hard covered, designed to look like a Victorian tome and filled with beautiful illustrations. Now, I can't wait to get started on volume two.
Profile Image for Carolyn Marie.
364 reviews9,092 followers
December 29, 2021
I鈥檓 ashamed to say that before today, I had not read this sorrowful series of books.
I grew up watching the Jim Carrey movie adaptation of A Series of Unfortunate Events, but this was my first time actually reading it!
And I鈥檓 extremely unhappy to say that I unfortunately loved it! 馃槈
Such terrible events!
Profile Image for Tea Jovanovi膰.
Author听393 books757 followers
April 11, 2013
Must read! Must read! Dve godine sam jurila informaciju ko dr啪i prava, 拧etali me od jednog do drugog da bih na kraju sjurila samog Lemoni Sniketa na jednom javnom 膷itanju/dru啪enju s 膷itaocima u knji啪ari Barnes & Noble u Njujorku davne 2002. godine i do啪ivela nesvakida拧nje iskustvo... Oko dvestotinjak dece (i njihovih roditelja) sedelo je na podu/stajalo i naizmeni膷no se smejalo ili vri拧talo i plakalo na Sniketove imitacije/interpretacije... Kako su deca nekada reagovala na Branka Kockicu samo jo拧 tri puta ja膷e i glasnije... I na kraju sam sjurila prava za Narodnu knjigu... Na啪alost, NK nije u膷inila dovoljno za ovaj serijal i ovog autora... I nadam se da 膰u jednoga dana uspeti ponovo da nagovorim nekog izdava膷a da objavi ovaj divan serijal...
Profile Image for Reynita 鈽� The Night Reader 鈽�.
129 reviews1,109 followers
June 3, 2018

MINI REVIEW IS POSTED



If you have ever lost some-
one very important to you,
then you already know
how it feels, and if you
haven't, you cannot
possibly imagine it.


I was pretty excited when I read this book because that was the first time I read this book and I also had no idea what the book was about and I quite enjoyed reading it. The book never bored me but the book wasn't really amazing either. it was just fine for me. Neither good nor bad. The characters in the book were pretty interesting ( except the villain, he creeped me out. ) and my favorite character was Sunny. She was so cute! and I also felt this urge to hug Violet, Klaus and Sunny while I was reading the book.

I don't think I will continue reading this series. I don't know why, but I just don't feel like I want to continue reading the series. This book was pretty good, nonetheless and I love the illustrations in this book! they're all so good! If you're interested in reading this book, I suggest you to try reading it. Maybe you'll enjoy it more than I did. :)


鈥⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌�

REVIEW TO COME TODAY.


鈥⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌�

This is my first time reading this book! I have been pretty curious about this series since ... I don't know when, quite long time, I guess and I am FINALLY reading it now! 馃槉馃憦馃徎

Have you guys read it? If you have, what do you think of it? ( no spoiler, please! )
Profile Image for 鈥� nova.
473 reviews336 followers
December 17, 2021
this should be called a series of USELESS ADULTS
Profile Image for Brian Yahn.
310 reviews609 followers
May 19, 2016
Easily one of the best children's stories I've read, The Bad Beginning is a high stakes, whimsical twist of a fairytale.

Count Olaf, the antagonist, ruins everything, but in a way that's super fun to read. As the stakes pile on, and bad luck for the main characters becomes the worst luck, and the tension reaches an all time high, the writing still maintains this playful even keel to keep everything fun and enjoyable.

It had me tearing through pages to see just how bad the beginnings got. And I loved every sentence.
Profile Image for Parisa forootan.
67 reviews18 followers
May 9, 2020
賮賯胤 丕夭 爻乇 讴賳噩讴丕賵蹖 禺賵丕爻鬲賲 噩賱丿 丕賵賱卮賵 亘禺賵賳賲貙
賵賱蹖 賮讴 讴賳賲 亘丕蹖丿郾鄄鬲丕 噩賱丿 丿蹖诏卮賲 亘禺賵賳賲馃槄馃憡
Profile Image for Emily B.
491 reviews518 followers
January 25, 2021
I started reading The Series of Unfortunate Events to help me with a small reading slump. Each book is easy to read and nice and short.

I wanted to read them as a child but never did so this was a perfect opportunity to do so.
Profile Image for Burt.
296 reviews35 followers
July 4, 2017
I never really did get into Harry Potter. I imagine that this is viewed as a crime by most everyone on this service. For some it is heresy. But, I refuse to stand shamefaced - Hogwarts just didn't do it for me.

I didn't think this would either.

However, I was more than pleasantly surprised. I am of a somewhat morbid streak, and the Series of Unfortunate Events books, I must say, tickles that grotesque bone in a way most pleasing.

The story of the Baudelaire Children is one filled with tragedy and dire peril. Orphaned after a massive house fire in which their parents burned to death, they are put in the care of their parents' will's executor until a distant relative, Count Olaf, comes to claim them... and their family fortune. The children however do manage to give him a run of it. In the end, they still have their money, but they simply are foisted off someplace else where there parents are still dead and their lot becomes more miserable. This is not a story for happy endings as the author will remind you, time and time again.

The real thing about the book that I love is the writing style and tone of the narrative. The author is quite the wordsmith, and he no doubt had it in mind that kids should be learning big, expansive words. He then mixes it up with subtle and unsubtle word play (in the fourth book, the narrator goes into the sensation of deja vu, and when you turn the page beginning that chapter it's the same page over again) that left me quite amused.

I only read about four of the books. The downfall of the series is that the villain never changes and the stories are all essentially the same at their core: the children go to live someplace horrible, and Uncle Olaf comes back to try and take their money. It's a one trick pony in that regard, but I really was quite taken by the wording of it.

It's worth the investment for the first book and it's a quick read. Give it a shot.
Profile Image for R.K. Gold.
Author听14 books10.1k followers
July 19, 2018
Wow! I feel like I鈥檓 finally capturing something that was missing from my childhood. Like there was some gap in my imagination that I didn鈥檛 know was there until I started reading this series.

I鈥檝e seen the Netflix series, which only further reminded me that I had never read this series before and had been missing out. I鈥檓 in a very exciting part of the journey. The Baudelaires just escaped Count Olaf and his plot to steal their fortune and I find even though I know the basic premise of each story I鈥檝e seen on the show, it hasn鈥檛 robbed the books of any of their magic.

I can see how Olaf would give children nightmares growing up and I love how the book breaks every rule of writing like avoid adverbs (especially very) and don鈥檛 use too many adjectives at once.

I鈥檓 really excited to start the Reptile Room today.
Profile Image for Steven Medina.
250 reviews1,267 followers
November 11, 2020
Lo peor que podr铆a sucederte es tener la suerte de los Baudelaire.

En realidad 3,5

Estamos acostumbrados a que las historias tengan un final feliz, pero, 驴qu茅 sucede cuando desde las primeras p谩ginas e incluso desde la portada el autor nos advierte que su historia no lo tendr谩? A pesar de que esta caracter铆stica puede ahuyentar a muchos lectores por la revelaci贸n de algo tan importante como el final, para m铆 fue inevitable no sentir curiosidad por una historia tan extra帽a y diferente de lo tradicional. Eso ocurre porque como humanos que somos nos atrae lo exc茅ntrico, lo prohibido y lo oculto. Claramente, este libro es un ejemplo de ello, ya que desde la sinopsis, el autor nos insin煤a que no leamos su libro y obviamente esas palabras tienen un efecto contrario caus谩ndonos m谩s intriga y deseo por sumergirnos en esta historia. Creo que con estas palabras es m谩s que suficiente para explicar la forma como el autor juega con nosotros:

芦Pero a ti nada te impide cerrar inmediatamente este libro y leer algo m谩s alegre, si eso es lo que prefieres.禄


Y ya que escribo sobre el autor debo reconocer que no solo el libro es diferente de lo tradicional, sino tambi茅n su prosa, eso s铆, a pesar de ser extra帽a es sorprendente por su sencillez, fluidez y porque relata lo necesario. La trama principal de esta obra es muy simple, pero Lemony Snicket sabe jugar muy bien con ella; desde aclarar algunas frases mencionadas con un toque de originalidad, hasta usar el rol de narrador para participar, opinar y criticar sus propios personajes y los acontecimientos descritos, hacen que este autor tenga un estilo 煤nico e interesante. Claramente Lemony se divirti贸 creando esta obra por la forma como se burla del infortunio de Violet, Klaus y Sunny. El problema es que no todos nos re铆mos de lo mismo, por lo que dependiendo de tu humor, puedes llegar a consternarte al momento de leer este libro.

Justamente, por el humor, es que en este caso no podemos guiarnos por las calificaciones de los dem谩s si deseamos determinar si leer o no esta saga. Las calificaciones ser谩n variadas y depender谩n exclusivamente del tipo de humor que tenga cada persona. En mi caso, en la primera parte del libro me re铆 mucho, pero m谩s adelante Lemony nos presenta una situaci贸n de maltrato f铆sico y psicol贸gico hacia los ni帽os, por lo que despu茅s de esa parte ya nada me pareci贸 gracioso. Esa jocosidad se fue transformando en compasi贸n y deseo por protegerlos porque les tom茅 cari帽o y naturalmente no me burlo de la mala suerte de quien aprecio. Deseaba la paz y felicidad para aquellos ni帽os, pero como sab铆a que no les acontecer铆a nada feliz, entonces ese sentimiento se convirti贸 en impotencia hasta el final. Por ello, si no te consideras cruel, si sufres con las desgracias ajenas o si lo que buscas es un texto del cual puedas recoger frases memorables, pues d茅jame decirte que este libro no es para ti. Para leer esta obra sin inmutarnos debemos tener un poco de frialdad, raz贸n por la cual no estoy seguro de cu谩ntos libros de esta saga hojear茅. S铆, son libros cortos, pero son catorce y como la historia tendr谩 los mismos matices y caracter铆sticas, no s茅 hasta qu茅 punto pueda tolerar tanta desgracia. Suelo leer todos los vol煤menes de una saga consecutivamente, pero en esta ocasi贸n siento que esa no es la forma de afrontar estos textos, sino que es mejor alternarlo con otras lecturas para no contagiarnos de tanta negatividad, ya que puede ser perjudicial para nuestra salud mental y eso no es lo que buscamos al momento de leer.

Sin embargo, hay una contradicci贸n: Este libro es altamente recomendado para los adolescentes. 驴Por qu茅? Porque en esa 茅poca de adolescencia estamos en el colegio y ese es el lugar donde ir贸nicamente nos volvemos m谩s crueles, irracionales y morbosos. All铆, estamos rodeados de tanta diversidad cultural y condiciones socioecon贸micas, que as铆 no lo deseemos nos volvemos rebeldes, nos contagiamos de las malas conductas de los dem谩s alumnos y nuestro coraz贸n se vuelve oscuro y despiadado porque en un colegio no solo se aprende lo bueno, sino tambi茅n lo malo. Justamente, con esas caracter铆sticas amaremos este libro. Adem谩s, el vocabulario es muy sencillo, no aburre nunca y los cap铆tulos son muy cortos, por lo que puede convertirse este libro en una gran opci贸n para acercar a los m谩s j贸venes a la lectura. Estoy seguro que ellos lo disfrutar铆an m谩s que los adultos, ya que entre m谩s vamos creciendo en edad y si estamos por el buen camino, m谩s nos duelen las desgracias ajenas porque ya entendemos y conocemos con m谩s experiencia lo que significa el dolor. Las preocupaciones y angustias cambian mucho dependiendo de la edad.

Personalmente, de haberlo le铆do en octavo cuando ten铆a doce a帽os, esta saga ser铆a de mis historias favoritas. Donde yo estudie nos hac铆an dedicar veinte minutos diarios a la lectura y aunque el libro elegido era opcional, lo que realmente importaba eran los res煤menes que deb铆amos presentar para no perder la asignatura de Plan Lector. Esos res煤menes deb铆an ser de quince a veinte renglones pero como los profesores no los le铆an, yo, en vez de escribir lo que deb铆a, resultaba escribiendo historias inventadas sobre las desgracias de mi amigo Dioni al intentar conquistar a Leidy, su enamorada. Ese a帽o creativamente fue muy especial y qued茅 muy sorprendido por la clase de historias que sal铆an de mi imaginaci贸n. Recuerdo que escrib铆 sobre mi amigo cayendo en una alcantarilla, siendo atacado por serpientes despu茅s de huir de un cocodrilo, declar谩ndole su amor a Leidy con las m谩s bonitas palabras pero descubriendo a la vez que ella era sorda, etc. 脡l tambi茅n hacia historias sobre mis hipot茅ticas desgracias y nos divert铆amos mucho a pesar de nuestra crueldad, por lo que en ese lejano 2005 este libro habr铆a sido perfecto para tener ideas con que sorprender a mi amigo. Ah, y por si acaso, nunca me descubrieron porque era el estudiante con las mejores notas en mi sal贸n.
En cuanto al desenlace me encant贸 porque Lemony nos ofrece un final alternativo. Ese detalle no lo ofrece casi ning煤n autor, por lo que agradezco ese detalle de pensar en quienes les gustan los finales felices, a pesar de la advertencia del inicio. Es como un premio para esos valientes que soportaron tantas desgracias... obviamente es un final falso, pero es una posibilidad.

Ya para terminar quiero aclarar que s铆 me gust贸 el libro, que la he pasado muy bien, que el trabajo del autor me pareci贸 excelente y que esta obra es mucho mejor que la pel铆cula protagonizada por Jim Carrey del a帽o 2004. El desarrollo de los personajes tambi茅n ha sido correcto, tanto de las v铆ctimas como el villano, por lo que el 煤nico elemento de controversia es el tipo de humor usado por Lemony, pero como ya mencion茅 m谩s arriba depende del lector. La ense帽anza que rescato de esta corta historia es que cada uno elige como vivir las adversidades: Afront谩ndolas o con resignaci贸n.
Profile Image for Victor.
352 reviews5,734 followers
November 18, 2016
Eu n茫o aguentava mais ouvir toda a popula莽茫o mundial falar desse livro e eu n茫o ter lido ainda. Acho que o trailer da s茅rie do netflix foi o estopim pra eu pegar e come莽ar de vez. E eu gostei bastante.

Me surpreendi como, apesar de ser um livro infanto juvenil, ele 茅 sombrio e sarc谩stico. Quase como se fosse uma cr铆tica aos livros do g锚nero. Amei os personagens (Sunny dona da minha vida), e o ritmo da hist贸ria 茅 muito gostoso. Mesmo curto, 茅 bem inteligente e com uma trama divertida. Gostei como ele 茅 moderadamente violento e obscuro, e traz um toque 煤nico para o livro.

N茫o tenho costume de ler muitos livros do g锚nero, porque nem sempre consigo aproveitar tanto. Tenho dificuldades em colocar a minha "capinha de infanto juvenil" e apreciar como as outras pessoas, mas esse me deixou em casa. Estou ansioso para ler os pr贸ximos e assistir a s茅rie quando sair.
Profile Image for fleegan.
311 reviews32 followers
August 14, 2007
Okay, I know this is a popular series and all, but frankly, I just don't see the charm. I do like that there's lots of vocabulary lessons in the book, but I don't like that the book is basically about child abuse. No, really. You want to write a kid's book? Fine. You want to write a kid's book about child abuse? Fine. Great even. But for the love, abuse is a serious thing, m'kay? And? AND? THE PART WHERE THE EVIL, GREEDY UNCLE TRIES TO MARRY THE 14 YEAR OLD ORPHAN GIRL?! EW! HELLO?! MR. SNICKET, WHAT IN THE HELL IS THE MATTER WITH YOU? ALSO, KIDS ARE NOT IDIOTS, AND WE ALL GET THAT THE BABY LIKES TO BITE THINGS. YOU CAN STOP REITERATING THAT ANY TIME NOW.

Perhaps I was expecting too much from a kid's book?

Profile Image for Josu Diamond.
Author听9 books33.4k followers
February 7, 2017
Ayyyy, me ha gustado mucho.

El primer libro de la saga Una serie de catastr贸ficas desdichas (en ingl茅s A Series of Unfortunate Events) me ha conquistado lo suficiente como para hacer la loca inversi贸n de seguir leyendo la saga -y digo loca porque son 13 libros cortos con precios variables entre unos y otros.

Lemony Snicket me ha enamorado con su estilo... 驴o deber铆a decir Daniel Handler? En cualquier caso, ha sido una novela con la que he estado entusiasmado mientras la le铆a. Cuando la dejaba, quer铆a volver a meterme en sus p谩ginas para saber m谩s de Klaus, Violet y Sunny, unos personajes que me han encantado en todos los aspectos.

Y os preguntar茅is por qu茅 le pongo tres estrellas a una novela que me ha encantado tanto. Y es por el simple hecho de que me ha parecido una novela vaga en cierto sentido. Poca historia, una trama que avanzaba quiz谩 demasiado r谩pido, unos personajes que llegas a conocer pero de los que quieres saber m谩s, una ambientaci贸n que se queda demasiado corta... No s茅, s茅 que es una novela infantil o middle-grade (aunque la puede disfrutar cualquier persona de cualquier edad), pero sinceramente he notado que le faltaban muchos detalles para hacer de esta una obra completa. Claro est谩 que esa no era la intenci贸n del autor, pues se nota que la obra completa son los trece libros.

O sea, es un libro que voy a recordar con ilusi贸n y del que hablar茅 mucho y bien. Sin embargo, no est谩 la altura de otros libros del g茅nero. Destaca de estos por el estilo y la tem谩tica, pero no por la profundidad del mundo. Me entend茅is, 驴no?

The Bad Beginning ha sido una novela que he disfrutado much铆simo y necesito leer la segunda parte cuanto antes. Estoy muy fascinado por todo (la edici贸n es maravillosa, 隆y vaya ilustraciones!), pero he echado en falta m谩s profundidad. Ya os contar茅 pronto qu茅 me parece The Reptile Room.
Profile Image for Kay.
2,210 reviews1,164 followers
March 19, 2020
5+
I don't read books for children much but I absolutely LOVE this! The audio production was phenomenal-narration, sound effects and music.
Profile Image for Sam Quixote.
4,733 reviews13.3k followers
December 27, 2017
The Baudelaire children - Violet, Klaus and Sunny - are suddenly orphaned when their parents tragically die in a fire. Their new legal guardian? A distant relative, the devilishly conniving Count Olaf, who will stop at nothing - not even murder most foul! - to get his hands on the Baudelaire family fortune. So begins the children鈥檚 Series of Unfortunate Events鈥�

I know this is a kid鈥檚 book but I surprisingly really enjoyed it - it not only held my attention but entertained me quite a bit too! Everything about The Bad Beginning embraces/lovingly parodies macabre/Gothic fiction, one of my favourite literary subgenres, albeit in a child-friendly, cartoonishly over-the-top style, so I found the book very appealing on an aesthetic level.

The atmosphere of the world is bizarrely, but not off-puttingly, anachronistic. It鈥檚 kinda faux-Victorian but also modern enough to have walkie-talkies, as well as being oddly skewed in general, full of absurdly one-dimensional supporting characters. The tone, along with the clever title and presentation, is determinedly, almost comically, downbeat in positioning itself as an anti-kid鈥檚 book, a playfully subversive touch I liked very much.

Even the framing device plays into the Gothic impression. Daniel Handler is the real author but his name is nowhere on this book. Instead it鈥檚 attributed to yet another fictional character, 鈥淟emony Snicket鈥�, portrayed as a stereotypically gloomy writer a la Edgar Allan Poe (there鈥檚 even a character here called Poe) who dedicates the book to his dead love, Beatrice, while occasionally inserting himself into the text. A story within a story - an unexpectedly sophisticated device for a kid鈥檚 book and I loved it. It adds an element of mystery too - who is 鈥淟emony Snicket鈥� and will we discover more of his life as the series progresses?

That said the writing is appropriately accessible for the intended younger audience and the world as a whole, and plot, is also simplistic to match. It鈥檚 an effectively engaging approach overall.

Count Olaf is a deliciously evil villain and is by far the standout character. The Baudelaire kids were ok but not especially interesting and everyone else was basically just window-dressing. The story is entertaining enough but nothing too special or original - it didn鈥檛 blow me away and it鈥檚 a little too farcical in how it plays out, though it鈥檚 fine.

The Bad Beginning is a really good start to this promising series - a charmingly strange and fun read!
Profile Image for Cece (ProblemsOfaBookNerd).
348 reviews6,979 followers
January 11, 2017
I think a 3.5 about sums up my feelings. This was a joy (or as Lemony Snicket would prefer, a misery) to reread. I haven't read this book in more than 10 years, so there were a lot of details I had forgotten, but I still love the Baudelaire siblings and how terrifying and sinister Count Olaf still is to me. It is written for younger audiences than the books I usually read, of course, so I might be basing a tiny bit of my rating on nostalgia, but I still loved the experience of getting back into this world and these characters. And now onto The Reptile Room!
Profile Image for Riley.
455 reviews24k followers
September 9, 2015
This is the first time I have reread this since the first time I read the series. I listened to the audiobook for this and loved it!
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