Lemony Snicket - A Series of Unfortunate Events
Posted: Aug 28th 2004, 10:10 pm
Yes, I realize I am an adult, but I love the Lemony Snicket books! I bought most of them here and there so I have the first ten books sitting on my shelves, but I read them in spurts beacuse I always have so many books to read lying around the house. I read the first book as soon as I bought it, but I didn't read the second and third books until last year. I just finished the fourth, fifth, and sixth books this week and now I'm totally hooked. This is a good website that lists many of the allusions and references in the books. The list is not complete since he does not want his site to be blocked by filters. That just means you'll have to do your own research on Lolita, Sappho, and Pincus on your own! 
There is a good interview here:


There is a good interview here:
The movie version (which covers the first three books) is being released in December, so I already told my boyfriend to start reading!Handler has also said that the books follow the great Jewish traditions: The Baudelaire orphans behave well and bravely because it's the right thing to do, not because it will get them ahead. "Judaism doesn't really promise any reward, they just emphasize that good behavior is more or less its own reward, " he said.
As a kid, Handler ate up the books of Roald Dahl and Edward Gorey -- two dark and funny authors. Today, what he can't bear are moralistic books for children.
"I think you learn something from any good book, and I think that one's education comes largely from literature. But over and over, the message of children's books is, 'If you behave well, you'll be rewarded.' Which is not a very Jewish message. It is just not an interesting message to me, and not a true one."
Handler had learned more interesting messages at home: His father fled Germany as a young boy. "I knew about the Holocaust at an earlier age than most people learn about it, I think, and so the idea that the world could suddenly go very wrong -- and that it had no bearing on what sort of person you were -- sunk in pretty early. And it's affected my politics and my writing and my life."
