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Encyclopedia > The Beatrice Letters
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)
Publisher HarperCollins
Released September 4, 2006 (UK)
September 5, 2006 (US)
Media Type Print (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages 72
ISBN ISBN

The Beatrice Letters is a book by Lemony Snicket. The book is tangential to the children's book series A Series of Unfortunate Events, and was published prior to the thirteenth and final installment. A short summary of the book is given on Barnes and Noble's website. [1]. A newer version of the cover [2] states that the book is "suspiciously linked to Book the Thirteenth", confirmed by the publisher's synopsis. Image File history File links Download high resolution version (530x700, 42 KB) Licensing This image is of a book cover, and the copyright for it is most likely owned either by the artist who drew the cover or the publisher of the book. ... Lemony Snicket is a pseudonym used by author Daniel Handler his childrens book series A Series of Unfortunate Events, as well as a character in that series. ... Link titleBold text--82. ... The English language is a West Germanic language that originates in England. ... An illustration of Klaus (left), Violet (top) and Sunny (right), the Baudelaire siblings, who are the three main characters A Series of Unfortunate Events is a childrens book series, written by Daniel Handler under the pseudonym of Lemony Snicket, and illustrated by Brett Helquist. ... Collins was a Scottish printing company founded by a Presbyterian schoolmaster, William Collins, in Glasgow in 1819, in partnership with Charles Chalmers, the younger brother of Thomas Chalmers, minister of Tron Church, Glasgow. ... Motto: (Out Of Many, One) (traditional) In God We Trust (1956 to date) Anthem: The Star-Spangled Banner Capital Washington D.C. Largest city New York City None at federal level (English de facto) Government Federal constitutional republic  - President George Walker Bush (R)  - Vice President Dick Cheney (R) Independence from... A hardcover (or hardback or hardbound) book is bound with rigid protective covers (typically of cardboard covered with cloth or heavy paper) and a stitched spine. ... To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article may require cleanup. ... Lemony Snicket is a pseudonym used by author Daniel Handler his childrens book series A Series of Unfortunate Events, as well as a character in that series. ... An illustration of Klaus (left), Violet (top) and Sunny (right), the Baudelaire siblings, who are the three main characters A Series of Unfortunate Events is a childrens book series, written by Daniel Handler under the pseudonym of Lemony Snicket, and illustrated by Brett Helquist. ... << The Penultimate Peril | (last in series) The End is the thirteenth and last book in A Series of Unfortunate Events by Lemony Snicket. ...

In a June update from Harper Collins mailing list AuthorTracker, a quotation from the book is given: “The only other student I know in this class is O., who is nothing but an annoyance. As I write this, he is filling his notebook with anagrams of obscene words. Collins was a Scottish printing company founded by a schoolmaster, William Collins, in Glasgow in 1819. ... Count Olaf is the main villain from Lemony Snickets A Series of Unfortunate Events series. ...


In a July update from AuthorTracker, the book is said to include, "a note passed in class, a startling telegram, a coded sonnet, and a desperate plea for assistance between Snicket and Beatrice." It is also stated that the book "starts long before The Bad Beginning and extends far beyond The End." In fact the two correspondants are not writing back and forth. Lemony Snicket is obviously writing to the first Beatrice (the Baudelaire mother) and this takes place before the Bad Beginning. Actually, before Violet, Klaus and Sunny were even born. The letters from Beatrice, however, are written by the second Beatrice Baudelaire (Kit Snicket's daughter) and take place after "The End". When Lemony Snicket writes he mentions the Root Beer Floats that he and Beatrice share together, how much he loves her and hinted about what happened when he asked her hand in marriage. When Beatrice Baudelaire writes to Lemony Snicket she talks about how far away they are from each other and how they've never met. At the beginning of "The Beatrice Letters" Lemony Snicket mentions that he is eleven years old and the same age as Beatrice. Beatrice wouldn't have been a Baudelaire yet at the beginning of the book because she wasn't yet married to a Baudelaire. Alternatively, Snicket may just be disguised as an 11 year-old and may actually be a young adult. This may be the case as the language he uses in the first letter is not as complex as he writes in the books, yet some of the vocabulary he uses is far too advanced for an 11 year-old. Eg. "Your oral report on the history of the Sonnet." By the end of the book they both would have grown up and Beatrice would have been married to Bertrand Baudelaire, and become a Baudelaire herself. If at the beginning of the book Beatrice is already a Baudelaire then she must be the second Beatrice who was adopted by the Baudelaire orphans. At the end of the book Beatrice mentions that she is ten years old. Lemony Snicket is an adult at the end of the book so that would be another reason to assume that the letters are from another Beatrice. (first in series) | The Reptile Room >> The Bad Beginning is the first novel in the book series A Series of Unfortunate Events by Lemony Snicket. ... << The Penultimate Peril | (last in series) The End is the thirteenth and last book in A Series of Unfortunate Events by Lemony Snicket. ...


The portfolio contains a booklet with facsimile correspondence and removable cardstock letters and a double-sided poster with art by Brett Helquist. Link titleBold text--82. ...


Each cardstock letter is mentioned in different, interesting ways. An example is that the first letter is an E, while on the next page, there is a letter from Snicket to Beatrice. A map Snicket had drawn for where Beatrice should meet him forms an E. Another example is that Fig. 3 (The Lock of Hair) forms a C, which is the letter on the cardstock before it. If you look at each letter that was sent and compare it to the letter on the punch out page before it, you will find that each letter(mail) has a letter that is the same as the punch out letter. The Paperweight is the S on the punch out card before it. The Hatpin is the I on the punch out page before it, and as already mentioned the Curl of Hair is the C and so on. All the Card-stock letters and all the letter on the pieces of mail are identical.


The cardstock letters appear to be an anagram of 'Beatrice Sank', either that or 'Baticeer Sank', as Beatrice is implied to be a baticeer. This might be in reference to the boat (which, by the illustrations, appears the be the boat used to escape by the orphans and Olaf at the end of The Penultimate Peril) or the person. The letters can also spell "Brae in Casket." This seems to be a likely possibility, as the letters that the paperweights imitate (S-T-I-C) is an anagram of "cist," which is a type of coffin. Another possibility is 'A Brae Snicket'. This would make sense as "brae-men" are referred to throughtout the book. Also, it is revealed that there are two Beatrice Baudelaires. Some believe that one is the Baudelaire's mother, and the other their sister. However, in The End, it reveals that the second Beatrice is Kit Snicket's daughter, who the Baudelaires become the guardians of. One letter (apparently written by the younger Beatrice) says she remembers "Sunny appearing on the radio to discuss her recipes." Since Sunny is a mere toddler in the main series, this would indicate that The Beatrice Letters does, in fact, extend beyond The End. Another, written by Lemony Snicket to, possibly, the older Beatrice, says to "look for the eleven year old wearing a green necktie" when referring to himself. This may prove that this starts before the Bad Beginning, as Snicket writes the books as an adult. To further support this, there is another identical shape of Beatrice on the cover. (See the back of the silhouette's hair.) The letters in the book are correspondence between Lemony and the two Beatrices, although it is left for the reader to determine which Beatrice is which. However the "Beatrice Sank" anagram may just be a reference to the boat which was named after Beatrice Baudelaire as the Beatrice Letters extended after the thirteenth book. Furthermore the Beatrice (the boat) was built by B who may in fact be yet another Beatrice, or Bertrand, the Baudelaires' deceased father. Or, since the name of the boat in The Penultimate Peril was named the Beatrice, the "Beatrice Sank" anagram could refer to how the Beatrice did, in fact, get destroyed at sea. << The Grim Grotto | The End >> The Penultimate Peril is book the twelfth in A Series of Unfortunate Events by Daniel Handler under the pseudonym Lemony Snicket. ... << The Penultimate Peril | (last in series) The End is the thirteenth and last book in A Series of Unfortunate Events by Lemony Snicket. ... Sunny Baudelaire is the youngest of the Baudelaire orphans in the childrens books A Series of Unfortunate Events, along with her brother Klaus and her sister Violet. ...


Of interest in this story is that Beatrice is identified to be a baticeer, purportedly one who trains bats. As a glance in a dictionary will make clear, there is no such word in the English language. Rather, baticeer turns out to be an anagram for Beatrice.


The book also makes regular reference to a poem called My Silence Knot. This is, of course, an anagram of Lemony Snicket. Lemony Snicket is a pseudonym used by author Daniel Handler his childrens book series A Series of Unfortunate Events, as well as a character in that series. ...


Also of interest is that all of the punch-out letters combined with the four paperweight letters can spell "baticeer niece stalks."


It is confirmed in the Harper Collins Children's Books Book Blast website, that the following are 'shocking revelations' that will be found in The Beatrice Letters:

  • Code Class is boring.
  • Long ago, Lemony Snicket was an assistant obituary spell-checker.
  • Surprisingly, Beatrice was 10 years old, or more likely, Lemony and Beatrice met when they were 10.
  • Punch-out letters should be removed and arranged to reveal at least one important secret message, then stored in one of two hidden file folders.
  • Root beer floats matter a great deal.

A fold out poster is included in the book, and when used in conjunction with The End it is possible that the wreckage of the boat, with the fragments of a sign that says Beatrice, is the boat that the four orphans set out on, and that the second Beatrice, is in fact Kit Snicket's daughter. When the boat crashed, the Baudelaires and Beatrice (the baby) were separated and now Beatrice is trying to get Mr. Snicket to help her track down the Baudelaires. Also, taking hints from both The End and The Beatrice Letters indicates the original Beatrice--the one Lemony Snicket fell in love with--is in fact Violet, Klaus and Sunny's mother, yet one Beatrice is the younger Beatrice, because she states that she remembered "Sunny on the radio" (thus Sunny is an adult at that time). Further evidence can also be drawn upon, from the push out letters, that spell Beatrice Sank. Beatrice was the boat that the orphans set out upon, so the boat evidently sank. Lemony Snicket is a pseudonym used by author Daniel Handler his childrens book series A Series of Unfortunate Events, as well as a character in that series. ... A root beer float. ...


However, the spatulas from The Penultimate Peril are seen amongst the wreckage, yet there was no indication of them being used as oars.


This book also reveals that Beatrice, the one that Snicket loved, was classmates with the Duchess of Winnipeg or R, and Snicket apparently believed he embarrased Beatrice in front of R.



 

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