I was a child who loved books.
Long books and short books. Fiction books and nonfiction books. Books I couldn’t understand, because they were far beyond my comprehension level, and books I’d been reading since I’d learned how. I’d read them all. I couldn’t stop.
I’m telling you this so that when I say I loved Lemony Snicket’s A Series of Unfortunate Events more passionately than anything else I read as a child – yes, more than Harry Potter – you’ll take me seriously.
I was a kid who knew what I was talking about when it came to books, so I knew, as soon as I turned the first page of the Bad Beginning, that I’d come across something special.
The story of the Baudelaire orphans, penned by the sarcastic and resoundingly fantastic Daniel Handler under the guise of “Lemony Snicket”, made me feel different. They weren’t just a good story (although I would line up at the bookshop of the morning of the next volume’s release to find out what happened next), or an excellent mystery (although the thrill of what “VFD” stood for and the secret of the sugar bowl sometimes kept me awake at night). A Series of Unfortunate Events was designed for kids like me – kids who loved words, who loved using our brains, who didn’t really get why everyone else was reading Total Girl but yearned to learn new words and think new thoughts. I found a home in those books that I hadn’t found anywhere else.