The End:
Book the
Thirteenth (A
Series of Unfortunate Events)This workis thirteenth in the dreadful "Series of Unfortunate Events"continuing the story of the Baudelaire orphans. The thirteenth audio bookfeatures more than the usual dose of distressing details. The onlything more depressing than this lamentable series is the realization that it isending. Whatother misery can life offer? You are presumably looking at the back of this book, orthe end of THE END. The end of THE END is the best place to begin THE END,because if you
read THE END from the
beginning of the beginning of THE END tothe end of the end of THE END, you will arrive at the end of the end of yourrope.Thecharacters are well-developed and amusing, and I love how the author himself isinvolved in the plot of the story. Lemony Snicket’s Series of UnfortunateEvents comes to a end with the last book, The End. Lemony Snicket is also theauthor of Lemony Snicket: The Unauthorized Autobiography and The BeatriceLetters. The world only knows what the Baudelaire didn’t do. Violet with theinventions, Klaus with the
books, and Sunny with the cooking skills help eachother. The Baudelaire “rock the boat” too far and end up with Olaf again. TheBaudelaire family is trustworthy to people that know them. “The end is quitenear indeed so if I were you, I would not read the end of The End.” Some advicebefore reading this book, read the first 12 books in the series! You can’t readThe End with out reading The Bad Beginning. But you will regret it if you don’tread the series. I highly recommend this book to others who have read the 12books before The End.I loveall the ones before but this one leaves you in a too big of a cliffhanger. Iknow that it must have been hard for him to write 'The End' but I still thinkthat it could have been better. He could have answered more questions and stillkeep it interesting. I recomend you read it to see what you think, Thisbook is absolutly outstanding. I do not believe LS when he says that this isthe last book, because it's not. He just leaves all off us on the edge, nottelling us what's next. I highly recommend this book to others who have readthe 12 books before The End.
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