45 pages • 1 hour read
Lemony SnicketA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
The Bad Beginning combines adventure, satire, and dark comedy into a children’s book. While the dark content seems incongruent with typical subjects of children’s literature, Daniel Handler was influenced by the grim works of writer-illustrator Edward Gorey and the macabre comedies of Roald Dahl. Dahl believed that children were able to deal with the dark side of life, and Handler delivers a heavy dose of trouble to his innocent protagonists. The Bad Beginning hence forms part of a literary landscape with its recent predecessors of transposing adult realism into fantastical comedies appropriate for children.
Handler’s texts include a lot of wordplay. The title of the series to which The Bad Beginning belongs, A Series of Unfortunate Events, contains a pun: It provides a prolepsis for the unhappy endings in the texts but is also a metafictional reference to each book as an “unfortunate event.” The first book contains 13 numbered chapters, and the series contains 13 books; the number 13 itself signifies unfortunate events.
The Bad Beginning’s chapters are filled with references to the artistic movement known as Symbolism. This style, centered in France during the mid-to-late 1800s, used words or painted images as symbols that represented the corruption and decadence of life and the dreamed-of ideals of something better in the afterlife.
By Lemony Snicket
The Austere Academy
Lemony Snicket
The Ersatz Elevator
Lemony Snicket
The Grim Grotto
Lemony Snicket
The Miserable Mill
Lemony Snicket
The Penultimate Peril
Lemony Snicket
The Reptile Room
Lemony Snicket
The Slippery Slope
Lemony Snicket
The Wide Window
Lemony Snicket
View Collection
View Collection
View Collection
View Collection
View Collection
View Collection
View Collection
View Collection
View Collection