What Parents Should Know
Figuring out what the hideous Uncle Olaf is up to, other
than no good, will keep readers' interest roused. There will be
plenty of nail biting as the clock clicks down.
Common Sense Media Review
THE REPTILE ROOM is the second in Snicket's
Series of Unfortunate Events books that follow the
rotten, cursed life of the Baudelaire children. This
installment plays less on their ill luck--that can safely be
taken for granted--and more on the story at hand, a mystery
cunningly unraveled by the children. Snicket presents it almost
like a play, with plenty of detail and a drawing-room
atmosphere.
Snicket does not rely on shock value to keep his audience's interest--he actually prepares them well for the bad tidings to come--but rather animates his bleak comedy with a suspenseful mystery that gathers momentum as it goes. As well, he ably handles unhappy emotions that steal over the Baudelaire children--and likely experienced by some of the readers as well--such as the "dark and curious feeling of falling that accompanies any great loss."
These books don't become stale. Their durability is clear from the rare comment overheard when an 11-year-old lent the book to a friend: "And I want it back."
The further adventure of the Baudelaire's are chronicled in Snicket's The Bad Beginning and The Wide Window. Two other books full of sly humor and suspense are William Mayne's Hob and the Goblins and Hob and the Peddler. And Shel Silverstein's poetry, such as Where the Sidewalk Ends, is good, wicked mischief.
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