
I mentioned in my previous post how the three main characters, Violet, Klaus, and Sunny Baudelaire, can sometimes feel like video game characters because of how much they are defined by their special skills-Violet invents things, Klaus knows a lot because he reads a lot, and Sunny bites things with her sharp teeth. Somebody Has to Slice an Enormous Length of Rope into Small, Workable Pieces It’s important to do that because this is only the second book of the series, and the first book where the guardian isn’t Count Olaf-the reader can’t have very clear expectations of how “unfortunate” these books will get, so the death of Uncle Monty establishes the tone, and severity of misfortune, for the entire series. So knowing that it’s going to happen ahead of time takes some of the edge off the murder. Montgomery and get to know him before he dies. The death of the caretaker is more disturbing than anything in the first book, because the children actually see his corpse (compare this to Harry Potter, wherein there’re no corpses until book four, more than halfway through the series.) It’s also more shocking to the reader than anything in The Bad Beginning, because unlike the parents who die in the first book, we actually get a chance to see Dr. It also softens the blow of Uncle Monty’s death. What’s interesting about this book is that it reveals the death of Uncle Monty as early as page 28-and not in some hint or euphemism, the narrator explicitly states, “It is Uncle Monty, unfortunately, who will be dead.” Mentioning this so far up front is important because it lets the readers know that, even though the main characters are having a good time in their new home, misfortune will strike again. Eventually Count Olaf shows up disguised as Monty’s assistant, and schemes to steal their children’s inheritance once again-a scheme made easier by the death of Uncle Monty. Right as the orphans arrive, Uncle Monty is planning a scientific expedition to Peru, and he wants the orphans to come along.


In this book, the Baudelaire orphans go to live with another distant relative, “Uncle” Monty, who studies snakes. As Lemony Snicket would say, if you don’t want plot information given away, “you are free to put this back on the shelf and seek something lighter.”Īnd Speaking of Spoilers … Cover courtesy of HarperCollins Today’s post regards book two, The Reptile Room, and it does contain spoilers for that book. With the TV adaptation just around the corner, I’m rereading one of my favorite book series from when I was a kid-A Series of Unfortunate Events.
