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Blog: A Fuse #8 Production (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Daniel Handler, Brett Helquist, Top 100 Children's Novels Poll, The Bad Beginning, Uncategorized, Lemony Snicket, A Series of Unfortunate Events, Add a tag
#48 The Bad Beginning by Lemony Snicket (1999)
43 points
Also brought me a huge list of new readers – boys and girls and teachers loved to read them out loud to the class. – Cheryl Phillips
I’m a Snicket girl, loving the play with wit and words in this Series of Unfortunate Events. – Pam Coughlan
Unlike other series no one had any desire to nominate a Snicket title other than this, the first. That helped its rating considerably. Previously #71 it now leaps up to the 40s. Not too shabby. My encounters with the book precede my library degree. When I lived in Portland, Oregon after college I started reading children’s books out of the blue (yet never dreamed I’d be a children’s librarian, odd as that may sound). I read the first few Snicket books in Powell’s on a lark and loved them, so after the publication of #4 I went and saw Mr. Snicket speak. He was wonderful, and the crowd was reasonable if not excessive. Later, when he would command entire buildings like the Union Square Barnes & Noble, I missed the early days of Snicketmania. Ah, nostalgic me.
Library Journal described the plot in this manner: “This series chronicles the unfortunate lives of the Baudelaire children: Violet, 14; Klaus, 12; and the infant, Sunny. In Bad Beginning, their parents and possessions perish in a fire, and the orphans must use their talents to survive as their lives move from one disastrous event to another. Surrounded by dim-witted though well-meaning adults, the Baudelaires find themselves in the care of their evil relative, Count Olaf, a disreputable actor whose main concern is getting his hands on the children’s fortune. When Olaf holds Sunny hostage to force Violet to marry him, it takes all of the siblings’ resourcefulness to outwit him. Violet’s inventive genius, Klaus’s forte for research, and Sunny’s gift for biting the bad guys at opportune moments save the day.”
In Funny Business: Conversations with Writers of Comedy (edited by Leonard Marcus) an interview was conducted with Daniel Handler, the face behind the Snicket. The son of a man who escaped the Holocaust, Handler’s career as a children’s author began when his editor suggested (after reading an adult manuscript) that he write for kids. The editor was Susan Rich, a woman we will now refer to as “Resident Genius” because I doubt that many editors would have seen the possibilities in Handler’s wordplay. The ideas? Not a problem. “That’s what always happens to me: I have a clear idea for a story right away, and then as I’m writing it I find that it has more twists and corners than I knew.” He told his editor it would be a thirteen book series. She told him he’d be lucky if he could publish four.
The charm of the series is well defined by Sandra Howard in the August 25, 2001 edition of Spectator. “As a child I had an invented other child that I used to enjoy pretending to be; she had a permanently wretched time, always cruelly treated, slaving away. I’m sure Lemony Snicket’s constant exhortations to expect only the direst events to occur will have a happily morbid appeal and I found myself impatient to know how the orphans were going to get out of one scrape to be ready for the next. The tales are straightforward, no foe-defying magic, just companionable sharing of a disastrous state of affairs.”
It’s probably not too surprising that the first book Handler bought with his own money was Edward Gorey’s The Blue Aspic. He was in first or second grade at the time. His other influences
Blog: the pageturn (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Libraries, Books, Reviews, Poetry, Authors, Jack Prelutsky, Picture Books, Christmas, Videos, Beginning Readers, Lemony Snicket, Illustrators, Thanksgiving, Lee Bennett Hopkins, Storytime, Hanukkah, Alma Flor Ada, Jane O'Connor, I Can Read, Rob Scotton, Brett Helquist, Dan Gutman, Laura Numeroff, Kwanzaa, Amelia Bedelia, Teaching Guides, Peggy Parish, Robin Preiss Glasser, My Weird School, Felicia Bond, Add a tag
I know, it seems crazy to talk about the holiday season already. But this is also the point where we start putting in book orders for the latest titles and replacing old books as well. So let’s jump in and talk about some of the newest books for the holiday season:
MARY ENGELBREIT’S NUTCRACKER by Mary Engelbreit (On-sale: 11.1.11). Download the memory game
THE HAPPY ELF by Harry Connick Jr., illustrated by Dan Andreasen (On-sale now). Based on the song by Harry Connick Jr., this comes with a CD. You can also watch the video.
A CHRISTMAS GOODNIGHT by Nola Buck, illustrated by Sarah Jane Wright (On-sale now). In its starred review, Publishers Weekly said that this book “serves special status, to be kept off-season with other holiday decorations and then brought out each year at Christmas.”
THE LITTLEST EVERGREEN by Henry Cole (On-sale now). School Library Journal calls this “a fine Christmas choice with an environmental message.”
FANCY NANCY: SPLENDIFEROUS CHRISTMAS by Jane O’Connor, illustrated by Robin Preiss Glasser (On-sale now). Download the event guide.
Need to replace books in your collection? Here are some possible titles that you may need to re-order:
Blog: The Children's Book Review (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Peter Hannan, Kim Norman, Brett Helquist, Ages Four to Eight: Books for pre-school to second grade, Ages Nine to Twelve: Books for third through sixth grade, Teens: Books for young adults, Book Lists: Specialty picks, Ages Baby to Three: Books for infants and toddlers, Maryann Cocca-Leffler, Susan Blackaby, Seasonal: Holiday Books, Liza Woodruff, Carmen Segovia, David Gilman, Rob Buyea, Add a tag
By Bianca Schulze, The Children’s Book Review
Published: January 28, 2010
Winter. A very fun season: Ice skating, skiing, sledding, building snowmen—or snow-ladies—and the perfect excuse for some good-old hibernation. Definition of hibernation: staying inside watching movies, playing board games, and reading books.
From picture books to a young adult novel, check out this uber-cool list …
Picture Books
by Brett Helquist
Reading level: Ages 2-7
Hardcover: 32 pages
Publisher: HarperCollins (December 21, 2010)
Source: Publisher
Publisher’s synopsis: Wintertime is here, and that means it is bedtime for Bear. But Bear’s friends don’t think so. They want Bear to come and play outside in the snow. Bear can hear his friends calling. He hears them laughing and playing. Bear can’t sleep. But it’s bedtime! What is a bear to do?
Add this book to your collection: Bedtime for Bear
Learning to Ski with Mr. Magee
by Chris Van Dusen
Reading level: Ages 4-8
Hardcover: 36 pages
Publisher: Chronicle Books (October 27, 2010)
Source: Publisher
Publisher’s synopsis: One winter morning, Mr. Magee and his little dog, Dee, head out bright and early to learn how to ski. But what begins as a pleasant day in the snow quickly goes downhill when a run-in with a curious moose sends them flying through the air and hanging above an abyss! How will Dee and Magee find their way out of this snowy situation? Chris Van Dusen, the creator of Down to the Sea with Mr. Magee and A Camping Spree with Mr. Magee, has crafted yet another fun-filled adventure for Magee fans old and new.
Add this book to your collection: Learning to Ski with Mr. Magee
by Kim Norman (Author), Liza Woodruff (Illustrator)
Reading level: Ages 3-7
Hardcover: 24 pages
Publisher: Sterling (October 5, 2010)
Source: Publisher
Publisher’s synopsis: Author Kim Norman (Crocodaddy) and illustrator Liz
Add a CommentBlog: Where The Best Books Are! (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Christmas books, 2010, Brett Helquist, The Rise and Fall of Mount Majestic, novels about heroic girls, Jennifer Trafton, wondrous novels, novels about giants, Add a tag
Rumor has it that their island mountain, Mount Majestic (which has risen and fallen once a day as longs as anyone can remember) is actually a sleeping giant covered with dirt. The king, an indulged, pepper-crazy 12-year-old, will hear nothing of it, but Persimmony is intrigued by the rumors and, after being dispatched to a cave, discovers the giant's enormous sleeping face. But how will she ever convince the island's inhabitants, the Leafeaters, Rumblebumps and especially King Lucas, that he's real? Unless she can get them to stop quarreling, the giant could wake up and cause the whole mountain to tumble down. Fantastic and fun, Trafton's debut is for anyone who loves to let their imagination run loose. (Recommended reading position: on your back with a toy building -- such as a Monopoly hotel -- balanced on your stomach.)