It is for Mitchell school , 7.1
Th setting of "the end" by lemony snicket is on a Desert island in the middle of nowhere.
count olaf dies
An island they get stranded there.
Lemony Snicket is a character entwined in the storyline in more ways then one. Lemony Snicket is not the real authors name, it is his pen name, and in the book series he has decided to have himself written in it. lemony Snicket researched and followed the lives of these children and isn't revealed until the end that he was once engaged to the Beudelare orphans mother. He was then framed for Arson and thought to be dead, so the childrens mother remarried to their father. After lemony Snickets love of his lifes demise he decided to research and tell the tale of the children.
In every single book he dedicated them to Beatrice Baudelaire.
You can read excerpts of it on Google Books. You can also purchase electronic copies of the book.
I believe because she was in love with someone else. In book the Thirteenth, The End it reveals who Beatrice is.
the kids go into a car with count olaf and esme squalor and drive away
no it was the end of the series he may start a new series but no promises
Not That i have heard of but i think theres not a 14 because the 13 is the end! So no there isn't a 14 book sorry!
That depends whether you think the book, THE END, was a conclusion. In my opinion it concluded a couple things but not all of them, but I think this was what Lemony Snicket wanted to happen. People now have to think of what they want to happen.There are various hints about what Snicket would have made happen in Snicket's other Series of Unfourtunate Events related books like, Letters to Beatrice, and The Unauthorized Biography.Like some people might want to think lemony snicket is there dad.By the way THE END ended.
Beatrice Baudelaire is a fictional character in Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events. She is the daughter of Kit Snicket, who dies after giving birth, making Lemony Snicket's niece yet another orphan. Baby Beatrice is adopted by the Baudelaire orphans, hence the use of the surname Baudelaire. At age one, "she looks very much like her mother," according to Chapter Fourteen.