rookiemag:breathingvioletfog:


this makes me happy
it’s sandy’s series of unfortunate events series
(I got the luck to play my favorite character-Violet)

rookiemag:breathingvioletfog:

this makes me happy

it’s sandy’s series of unfortunate events series

(I got the luck to play my favorite character-Violet)

The subtlest canonical gay pairing in history, brought to you by Lemony Snicket.

riseuplikeangels:

A Series of Unfortunate Events, a series aimed (however sardonically) towards children and young adults, has a canon same-sex pairing, hinted at on such a minuscule scale you wouldn’t know it was there if you weren’t squinting, as well as reading another work inspired by the Series: The Beatrice Letters. 

In “The Miserable Mill,” Sir and Charles are portrayed as business partners, but as the series goes on and as the canon is extended, we begin to see the true extent of their relationship. In “The Penultimate Peril,” Charles tells Sir that he cares about him, to no reciprocation. At the end of this twelfth book of the series, during the fire destroying the Hotel Denouement, Sir and Charles are running through the smoke, holding hands. 

Their relationship is brought, still subtly, to the forefront in a section of “The Beatrice Letters,” where Snicket, in a series of metaphors that he uses to tell Beatrice exactly how long he will love her, includes the following: 

“I will love you until C realises that S is not worthy of his love.” 

Putting a gay pairing in a book series aimed at children? Making it quite literally not a big deal? Making it natural canon instead of a big well-to-do? Four for you, Lemony Snicket. You go, Lemony Snicket. 

I would actually say that Grandpa Larry and Grandpa Wayne in the (similar) series The Secret Series of Pseudonymous Bosch achieves the same, but does so in a more equalized and positive-relationship scope than Charles and Sir, since Larry and Wayne are wholly devoted to each other and on equivocal planes of their relationship in all respects (both domestic and professional).


» tags: #lemony snicket

The burning of a book is a sad, sad sight, for even though a book is nothing but ink and paper, it feels as if the ideas contained in the book are disappearing as the pages turn to ashes and the cover and binding—which is the term for the stitching and glue that holds the pages together—blacken and curl as the flames do their wicked work. When someone is burning a book, they are showing utter contempt for all of the thinking that produced its ideas, all of the labor that went into its words and sentences, and all of the trouble that befell the author.

Lemony Snicket - The Penultimate Peril (via apaperbackreader)

Reader: Dear Mr. Snicket, What is the best way to keep a secret?
Lemony Snicket: Tell it to everyone you know, but pretend you are kidding.
samdraws:

Just got this picture in an email from Lemony Snicket, with the caption “Why would anyone want to steal this statue?”
So it begins!

samdraws:

Just got this picture in an email from Lemony Snicket, with the caption “Why would anyone want to steal this statue?”

So it begins!


Lemony Snicket - Horseradish: Bitter truths you can’t avoid

Lemony Snicket - Horseradish: Bitter truths you can’t avoid

(Source: theredhairing)