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The End by Lemony Snicket
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The End (A Series of Unfortunate Events, Book 13)

by Lemony Snicket

Series: A Series of Unfortunate Events (Book 13)

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2,609701,141 (3.89)31
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THE END is the last of the Series of Unfortunate Events. In this book the children along with Count Olaf end up in a coastal shelf were an inhabited island is near by. This has been and island that the have heard about and how amazing it was. With the suspence building up through this book so did the want to know what the mysteries the children encountered could be solved or how they could be answered. As u read the last chapter of the book u want to know what happened to the Baudelaires, will we know more of their adventures?, wil we know more of their history? But like most books this is the end.

So I would recommend this book to some people but not all of them
  DrakStar_VicFirth | Dec 17, 2009 |
The End is book the thirteen, and the last, in Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events. Ending in mystery A Series of Unfortunate Events ended with the Baudelaire heading in the great unknown, mentioned several times throughout the series, leaving the reader hanging, and open to interpret the ending for themselves. Like the first two books in the series, The End has it's own single formula to work to. The Bad Beginning had the Introduction, Crisis, get moved to a new guardian, Twist, Crisis, Solution kind of thing. As did every other book in the series, by book the fourth the repitition got kind of silly. So when I reached The End it was nice to see a change.

After destroying the Hotel Denouement in the Penultimate Peril, the Baudelaire orphans and Count Olaf have escaped to the seas, heading to an unknown destination. After an ubnexpected storm, they are swept to the shore of a mysterious, lone, island -- which has a community of white-robed people.
The Baudelaires successfully gain entry, Count Olaf however after announcing he is king of the island is denied to have anything to do with the island. The Baudelaires discover a rotten plot beneath the sands of the island, and of course an evil plot of Count Olaf's emerges too as he appears with the helmet of Medusoid Mycelium...

I'm tired of reviewing today so I'll see if I can be arsed to review it another time. Yeahh, good end to the series, still, doesn't tie up the loose ends... ( )
1 vote JordanLangston | Nov 21, 2009 |
I think the plot was good, so it's a pity that it's ruined by the author's attempt at making the book 'educational'. It gives the books a very forced feel and sort of ruins it for me. For instance, often several pages are taken up just with a long and completely unnecessary explanation of a word, and how many times do you need to write the word 'never' in order to convey that it's not safe to mess around with electrical sockets? Surely not enough times to fill three pages.

People keep talking about the 'dark humour' in these books. I don't find it particularly dark at all, just irritating. The Grim Grotto was, I think, my favorite from the series. But just as I was starting to think the plot was getting nice and dark and actually captivating, along came the 'humerous overtone which takes the edge off the terrible things the children experience' (roughly quoted from another review). That's what I don't like about it - 'taking the edge off' disrupts the plot and stops me from really getting into the books.

so far I haven't found anyone else who has notice this aspect of the book, which I find strange because its so obvious, or if they have noticed they don't seem to be worried by it.

I probably sound pretty harsh, so don't get me wrong, I really enjoyed this series. It was entertaining, but I couldn't really get into it. ( )
  fleurfleming | Oct 21, 2009 |
Not quite the "whiz bang" ending you would expect, but it was satisfactory. Mainly because it's the end of one story, but not "THE END" of the Beaudelaires' story. There are still a few loose ends that don't get tied up and that's nice because life is like that.

I thoroughly enjoyed this series which I thought was petering out around Book the Fourth, but things turned around. ( )
  GBev2009 | Oct 13, 2009 |
I Loved This Series =D ( )
  Luiise | Oct 4, 2009 |
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Epigraph
Dedication
For Beatrice -- I cherished, you perished. The world's been nightmarished
For Beatrice -- We are like boats passing in the night -- particularly you.
First words
If you have every peeled an onion, then you know that the first thin, papery layer reveals another thin, papery layer, and that layer reveals another, and another, and before you know it you have hundreds of layers all over the kitchen table and thousands of tears in your eyes, sorry that you ever started peeling in the first place and wishing that you had left the onion alone to wither away on the shelf of the pantry while you went on with your life, even if that meant never again enjoying the complicated and overwhelming taste of this strange and bitter vegetable.
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Amazon.com (ISBN 0064410161, Hardcover)

Picking up from the final pages of the Pentultimate Peril, this farewell installment to the ridiculously (and deservedly!) popular A Series of Unfortunate Events places our protagonists right where we last left them: on a large, wooden boat in the middle of the ocean, trapped with their nemesis Count Olaf, who has armed himself with a helmet-full of deadly Medusoid Mycelium.

The situation quickly and--this being the Baudelaires--predictably deteriorates. Violet, Klaus, and Sunny find themselves tossed in a storm so terrible that our beloved narrator spends four pages describing how he cannot describe it. From this point on, fans of the series' smarty-pants wordplay and acrobatic narrative can rest assured that they're in for more of the same (and how) in this 368-page finale, and Daniel Handler's deadpan Snicket continues to tutor a generation in self-referential humor (including one particularly funny bit regarding three very short men carrying a large, flat piece of wood, painted to look like a living room). Snicket notes, of course, that if you read the entire series, "your only reward will be 170 chapters of misery in your library and countless tears in your eyes."

There's one big question, though, for anyone who's made it through "the thirteenth chapter of the thirteenth volume in this sad history": is the final book a fitting end? That question is probably best-answered by one of The End's most oft-repeated phrases: It depends on how you look at it. Those looking for conclusive resolution to the series' many, many mysteries may be disappointed, although some big questions do get explicit answers. Not surprisingly for a work so deliberately labyrinthine, though, even the absence of an answer can be sort of an answer--and reaction to The End can be something of a Rorschach test for readers. Or, as Lemony Snicket says, "Perhaps you don’t know yet what the end really means." --Paul Hughes

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:55 -0400)

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