Showing posts with label absurd. Show all posts
Showing posts with label absurd. Show all posts

Sunday, July 20, 2014

12. A Series of Unfortunate Events, Book 9: The Carnivorous Carnival

A Series of Unfortunate Events, Book 9: The Carnivorous Carnival
By Lemony Snicket (Pen Name for Daniel Handler)
HarperCollins, 2002
Narrated by Tim Curry

Genre
Gothic Fiction

Awards
None known

Review
This is the ninth book in a 13 part series that follows the Baudelaire siblings, Violet, Klaus, and Sunny, along a literal series of very unfortunate events that befall them.  Count Olaf and his odd troupe are still trying to find the Baudelaire's so they can likely kill two of them and capture the third to get their hands on a fortune left to the children by their parents.  The children must disguise themselves as circus freaks to fit in at a circus in the middle of nowhere.  The siblings spend their time at the carnival trying to escape and solve more of the mystery behind their parents' deaths before Count Olaf feeds one of the "freaks" working at the carnival to a group of recently acquired lions.  Handler creates a world where adults are ludicrous, caring more about the entertainment provided by "freaks", sloppy eating, and murder than the legality of the situation.  The children's guardian of sorts, Mr. Poe, is eternally inept causing the children to constantly try to escape Count Olaf on their own.  In contrast to the ridiculous adults, the three children are extremely smart and resourceful.  Handler also has a mysterious running side-story with the "author" Lemony Snicket who is supposedly chronicling the "true" tale of these children.  Their story somehow intertwines with his own unhappy circumstances, a mysterious organization named V.F.D., and a loss of his true love Beatrice.  The audiobook is satisfactory, with enough voice distinction to follow the characters and the narrator; there are orchestral inserts to introduce each chapter, played by The Gothic Archies created specifically for these audiobooks.

Opinion
This whole series is Gothic and dark, possibly disturbing some younger readers.  There is, however, dark comedy in how absurd the adults are in the face of all the children's problems.  Despite a lack of moral compass in many adults, the children maintain their own morals and struggle with having to do things that are wrong in order to ensure their survival.  I have read the previous books; this is the first book in the series I have listened to the audio of and I was disappointed.  I found the reading to be adequate if not lackluster, and I found the music irritating, abrupt, and distracting.

Ideas
This books shows many instances where the children must rely on their own skills to get out of situations.  Adults can show tweens that adults are not like this in reality - there is always someone they can talk to whether it's their parents, teachers, police, etc.  On a more positive note, this book has a lead female character who is an imaginative inventor, a role mostly taken by male characters.  Handler also instills a love of books through Klaus, an avid reader and apt researcher.  Children can learn that whatever their skills may be, they can be useful, especially when combined with others.

Tuesday, July 15, 2014

9. The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy

The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
By Douglas Adams
Pan Books, 1979
Narrated by Stephen Fry

Genre
Sci-fi, Humor

Awards
  • #1 on Sunday Times Bestseller list (1979)
  • #1 UK Bestseller List (1984)
  • 1,000,000 copies sold - Golden Pan awarded to Douglas Adams (1984)
  • #24 on Waterstone's Book/Channel Four's list of "One Hundred Greatest Books of the Century" (1996)
  • #4 on BBC's "Big Read" or "Nation's Best Loved Book" (2003)

Review
Arthur Dent thought it would be a relaxing Thursday, but woke up to the Earth about to be destroyed and his house about to be bulldozed! Soon he finds out his best friend, Ford Prefect, is a hitchhiker from another planet.  The two are promptly beamed into a Vogon spaceship that Ford flagged down so they could escape the Earth before its destruction.  Arthur and Ford later end up in the company of the Galactic President Zaphod Beeblebrox and Trillion, known as Tricia McMillan back on Earth where Arthur tried to have a nice conversation with her before Zaphod showed up with his apparently very successful pickup line, "Why don't you talk to me instead? I'm from a different planet."  The four of them, with a depressed robot, on their stolen spaceship powered by an improbability drive allowing them to travel through every point in space simultaneously, travel to the planet Magrathea.  Here they discover that the answer to THE question of "life, the universe, and everything" had been discovered millions of years ago by the great computer Deep Thought to be 42.  Not understanding the answer because they hadn’t asked the right question, the curious race was turned into mice and commissioned Earth (really an organic computer program used by the mice to study humans to find the real question) to be built.  This book full of absurd humor and an imaginative world if brought to life with the wonderful voice acting of Stephen Fry in this unabridged audio book.

Opinion
This is a wonderful book, humorous and fun for middle grade through early high school readers.  The absurdity of some of the humor is contrasted by the slight nagging thought that, if the mice were very good at their jobs as experimenters, we would never know if this were all true.  This is a great introduction to science fiction with creative characters and a thought provoking overarching theme.

Ideas
This book might be a good way to jump start a creative project about life on other planets, or a creative writing prompt to write about one of the other planets or species that may be in Douglas's world.  Otherwise, this would be a great book for a display of classic science fiction.