The End
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anyone else who found the ending to this series incredibly dissapointing?
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[deleted user]
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Mar 05, 2016 08:25PM
I'm with you. The end did suck! After everything those kids went through, you'd think they'd take the Judge's offer of a permanent home. They were entitled to a happy ending, I thought.
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It is implied and even explicitly stated that the ending would not be happy throughout the entire series. I don't know what you were expecting.
Hopefully, that, at THE END of it all, the Baudelaire kids would finally find some happiness. Perhaps it's not realistic, as far as what we SHOULD expect, but, I feel sorry for the poor kids!

And we were warned, just saying. At least twice...
And the mention of Series of Unfortunate Events at the end doesn't mean this series. Snicket said himself that they never read their story, at least not that he knew of. Why would he say that if they actually did read their story in the end? He must mean a different book, most likely the Beatrice Letters because the title for that book on goodreads is: The Beatrice Letters (A Series of Unfortunate Events)
The end.

Olaf loves to boast about his accomplishments. He constantly talks about how ~evil~ he is. If he did burn down the Baudelaire mansion, he would've boasted about it, in my opinion at least.
"You're the one who made us orphans in the first place," he [Klaus] said, uttering out loud for the first time a secret all three Baudelaires had kept in their hearts for almost as long as they could remember. Olaf closed his eyes for a moment, grimacing in pain, then stared slowly at each of the three children in turn.
"Is that what you think?" he said finally.
"We know it," said Sunny.
"You don't know anything," Count Olaf said.
I don't think he'd be so insistent of his innocence if he did burn down the mansion. Also, in TPP, when he defends himself on trial, his insistence of innocence is comedic and clearly exaggerated. This seems quite severe in comparison. As well as that, I personally believe that Handler includes everything for a reason; would he really include this passage to make us think that Olaf had burned down the mansion?
Also, good job pointing out that they had never read their story. I remember him saying such; do you remember where? It's still possible that the Baudelaires read ASOUE (Snicket's version, not the island's) after he said so or at least, before he compiled TBL. I think that the Goodreads title is only in reference to what series TBL belongs to, though.


But that's the beauty of it. It's realistic and nebulous and doesn't have a neat finish, because that's not how real life works. There's no such thing as a "story" in real life; everything overlaps and stretches on and is far more complex than beginning, buildup, dilemma, resolution, finish.
The answers are there. The sugar bowl, VFD, everything; you just have to read between the lines. In real life, not everything is handed to you on a silver platter, and I think that ASOUE is the perfect example of show not tell; it shows you the answers in plain sight, and because we're so used to answers being handed to us as readers, it challenges everything about literature as we know it.
If you're looking for answers, go read fan theories/analyses of the text. They are there, just not spoonfed to you.


And the ending is sort of beautiful in its own way. Not everything has a resolution. No stories truly end. You just go on.

first of all what happens to the sugar bowl
second of all what happens to the Baudelaire fortune no one gets it?
who died in that hotel?
What is Count Olaf's story?
Does lemoney take care of the kids they have a baby for gods sake!

But he's made so many interwoven plots, etc. and this world that he's created is huge. I doubt that he really doesn't know. Plus, he hints at many different things, so he must've at least known some things.



Plus I enjoyed the first twelve and read them in a month.....

Personally, I really liked ATWQ, but Snicket isn’t for everybody. I seem to share some of his sense of humor, for lack of a better word, so it makes me feel better whenever reading one of his books, but my sense of humor is very specific and different anyways.
Of course, if you wanted everything wrapped up in a neat bow, I’m not sure why you read this series. Many times, Snicket pointed out and warned the readers. I mean, I get the want to read it, but his reverse psychology wasn’t even that good lol. I read the books because I like the storylines as well as his writing style, not for a neat ending, which is exactly what he said wouldn’t be there.
As far as the book being titled “The End,” it doesn’t really matter. While it may be the end of that particular series, it doesn’t mean that we won’t ever see Violet, Klaus, and Sunny Baudelaire ever again. Like I’ve mentioned, his books are all intertwined, so I’m not sure what the title has to do with anything.
Anyways, I’m not going to bother trying to change your mind. This is just what I think, personally, and maybe you might see some of my points in why I think that way. I get how it can be a little disappointing though. I wish that we’d been provided with a few more answers, too. As to what the Baudelaires will do, I would assume keep working for VFD. Fighting fires. It makes sense.

Plus What became of the Quagmires I feel so sorry for them and Fiona my fab character...... I really hope that in the new Netflix series some of these things will be more clear. Though they already didn’t kill the guy of indeterminate gender or the bald man... Someone mentioned that they might quit with the powder face women in the slippery slope...
I’m just ranting to any one who will listen now... I probably will pick up another book by snicket in years to come....



Why is that a problem?
Also, if you want to be left alone, why exactly are you here???

The amount of battles I have fought for a fandom is a tad bit insane your right I could ignore but I'm choosing not to. I loved these books but was enormously disappointed!
First of all the baby needs milk second how will it survive the ocean trip third why the thing they fought for the entire time they can't get cause they are wanted criminals.



Also in the netflix series they seem to give the impression that maybe the parents are alive? I mean they show a couple searching for children throughout the series.

Also, some of his other series/books (ATWQ and a few others) explain a lot more about VFD. But yeah, I can see how it was a little bit of a letdown. I think the Netflix series will show a little bit more about the sugar bowl. I almost wish that it hadn't ended heh. I really liked Violet, Klaus, and Sunny Baudelaire.
My love for them reached its maximum at the first book haha. I would say The Reptile Room, The Wide Window, The Ersatz Elevator, The Austere Academy, and The Penultimate Peril were probably my main favorites. I'm thinking about going back and reading the series again. Every time I reread the books, I catch more things in the earlier books since I've also read the later books.


Oh if you watch on it turns out it was the Quagmires parents then they died in the fire...

Yeah, that was the Quagmires, heh..

" I agree. I didn't read the whole series for this ending.

When I read the word Beatrice in The End, everything just made so much sense and I really did love that because that does explain a lot, his obsession with documenting what happened to the Baudelaires among other things. That single line was crafted/planned so perfectly.
The ending is not nearly as unspeakably horribly evil as the ending to All The Wrong Questions though, that had the most insane cliffhanger ending filled to the brim with unexplained and unsolved monstrosities and loose ends I could possibly imagine and I expected no less.
Disappointed is not exactly the word I would use... I liked the ending. Did it feel like an ending? No, it didn't. Did I want to know about the sugar bowl? The schism? The Quagmires? Etc.? You bet I did. But it being the book that it is, I kind of accepted I wouldn't get all the answers. It was as unfortunate as he always warned so it's my fault for reading all of it only to end up at some weird place where we don't know what's going on or what's to happen next. I think it was kind of brilliant and left it open for all kinds of possible theories. But I don't know it's been 7yrs since I read the end.
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