I just read The Bad Beginning by Lemony Snicket.

It's far too self-consciously arch. The villains are evil for its own sake, and know it--and maybe someone could pull this off, but Snicket doesn't. The central devices appear to be exaggeration, cute names (the main characters are named Baudelaire, and the old family friend is Mr. Poe, and his oldest son is named Edgar), and repeatedly using a not-especially-difficult word and defining it parenthetically.

I believe there are five or six more of these books, but have no particular intention of spending the half hour each it would take to find out if they're better than the first.

From: [identity profile] bohemiancoast.livejournal.com


I quite like them, and I think Marianne will like them in time, though the time is not yet. Handler clearly intends them to be reading-out-loud books, but M's far too nesh for them; the very first scene had her horrified that a book could be so rotten to its characters. (She didn't express it like this).

She'll be a middle reader in about another year, I reckon. Currently reading huge amounts of Enid Blyton (the fairy-type stories, not the school stories or adventures), but just beginning to get into the easier Roald Dahls.
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