Ratings164
Average rating3.9
This book made me want to be a member of the VFD and a better person. It quite literally is one of the books that has formed me into the person I am–at least the good parts of who I am now.
Kit Snicket is zwanger en voert de Baudelaires naar Hotel Denouement, waar ze concierge worden, en er twee manager zijn, de tweelingbroers Frank en Ernest — de ene een goeie, de andere een slechte. De suikerpot komt te sprake, en eigenlijk alles van de voorgaande 11 boeken: Olaf en Esmé zijn er natuurlijk, en Carmelita Spats die ondertussen hun minofmeer adoptieve dochter is geworden, en Sir en Charles uit The Miserable Mill zijn er, en Nero en een aantal leraars uit Austere Academy en Hal van Hostile Hospital en Justice Strauss uit Bad Beginning en Jerome Squalor uit Ersatz Elevator en Mr. Poe, en shenanigans, uiteindelijk komt het tot een rechtszaak. Waar twee van de drie opperrechters blijken slechteriken te zijn, en de enige manier om iedereen te redden van vergiftiging door die Medusoid Mycelium van vorig boek is het hotel afbranden. Waarna de Baudelaires en Count Olaf zich terugvinden in een boot op de zee, wegdrijvend van de wereld.
I can't say that I've been enjoying this series very much. But I've been determined to finish it. It has gotten slightly better as it went along.
My feelings about this second-to-last book in A Series of Unfortunate Events are divided. On one hand, it is an impressive tying together of the series, a wonderful penultimate journey through the previous eleven books. On the other, it is unsettling, a fatalistic blow that buries the most redeeming aspects of the series beneath a darkness with implications I shudder to think about.
First, the good. The Penultimate Peril brings together many familiar characters and places them in a situation that is entertaining and appropriate. Those reading the story aloud will have to strain to remember the voices of so many characters throughout the series and keep them straight (not an easy task, but I was up for the challenge). The drama, action, and humor are all turned to full for this chapter in the Baudelaire story. It's a good mix, and certainly a wonderful addition.
But the decisions made by our “heroes,” well, they seem out of character, though there was some indication of it in the previous volume. This sudden change in approach, this resignation to despair and acceptance of fate is very fatalistic. I understand—and have liked—Snicket's growing maturity throughout the series, forcing bigger words and larger questions as the book number increased, but this may be going to far. Not only does it all seem forced, but the reactions themselves are rather insipid. Perhaps this is merely an indication of what is to come in the final book—maybe this change is purely a plot device for the final chapter—but in the meantime, the only heroes a child can have in this series have been dashed against the cliffs of a pessimistic philosophy. As the Baudelaires would say in this chapter of their lives, eventually they'd only have failed you anyway.
Though a series of unfortunate events, A Series of Unfortunate Events has always shown some glimmer of hope, if in no other way than in the hearts of the Baudelaires. Now, looking out at the coming horizon, it looks quite bleak. I guess Snicket said all along it wouldn't be a happy ending, but I didn't expect the darkness to infect everything. Here's to hoping Snicket left a ray of light in The End.
A Series of Unfortunate Events:
The Bad Beginning – 3.1
The Reptile Room – 3.2
The Wide Window – 3.6
The Miserable Mill – 3.3
The Austere Academy – 3.4
The Ersatz Elevator – 3.3
The Vile Village – 3.1
The Hostile Hospital – 3.4
The Carnivorous Carnival – 3.9
The Slippery Slope – 3.6
The Grim Grotto – 3.9
The Penultimate Peril – 3.4