The Beatrice Letters
Author | Lemony Snicket |
---|---|
Illustrator | Brett Helquist |
Cover artist | Brett Helquist |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Series | A Series of Unfortunate Events (companion) |
Genre | Gothic children's fiction |
Publisher | HarperCollins |
Publication date |
September 4, 2006 (UK) September 5, 2006 (US) |
Media type | Print (Hardback) |
Pages | 72 pp |
ISBN | 0-06-058658-3 |
OCLC | 64229864 |
LC Class | PZ7.S6795 Bea 2006 |
The Beatrice Letters is a book by Lemony Snicket. It is tangential to the children's book series A Series of Unfortunate Events, and was published shortly before the thirteenth and final installment. According to its cover, the book is "suspiciously linked to Book the Thirteenth", although the British edition merely states that it "contains a clue to Book the Thirteenth".
The book consists of thirteen letters, six from Beatrice Baudelaire to Lemony Snicket, six from Lemony Snicket to Mrs. Beatrice Baudelaire, and one from Lemony Snicket to his editor (one of these appears in every book in the main series, but this is the first time such a letter has been incorporated into the plot). However, the two Beatrices, despite sharing a name, are clearly separate individuals, and while Lemony Snicket's letters are plainly written beginning from his childhood and ending shortly before Violet Baudelaire is born, the Beatrice writing to Snicket is apparently writing after the events of The End. The older Beatrice is the one referred to throughout A Series of Unfortunate Events by Lemony Snicket as his deceased love, and her identity as the mother of the Baudelaire children from the series is revealed in The Beatrice Letters, but the younger Beatrice's identity is not directly explained, apart from the statement that she also has some connection to Violet, Klaus, and Sunny (although in The End it is revealed that she is the daughter of Kit Snicket).
The book contains twelve punch-out letters (of the alphabet, as opposed to correspondence, although the ambiguity is intentional), and each is mentioned in different, interesting ways. An example is that the first letter is an E, juxtaposed against a card from Snicket to Beatrice, in which a map Snicket had drawn forms an E. The cardstock letters can appear to be anagrams of 'Beatrice Sank', Beatrice being the boat in the book The End and 'A Snicket Brae', as it has been said that Lemony Snicket lived in the hills for some time.
Kidsreads.com praised The Beatrice Letters, claiming "Snicket incorporates what could, surprisingly, be one of the most touching and heartfelt (if absurd) love letters ever written...[it] heightens the stakes, and the anticipation, for Snicket's eagerly awaited Book the Thirteenth."[1]
The book also includes a poster of what appears to be the wreckage of 'The Beatrice', along with a cave, Klaus's glasses, and Violet's hair ribbon.
See also
Wikiquote has quotations related to: The Beatrice Letters |
References
- ↑ Phiel, Norah. "Review: The Beatrice Letters". Kidsreads. Retrieved 1 December 2010.
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