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38 pages 1 hour read

The Ersatz Elevator

Fiction | Novel | Middle Grade | Published in 2001

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Background

Series Context: The Ersatz Elevator in A Series of Unfortunate Events

The Ersatz Elevator is the sixth installment in A Series of Unfortunate Events, coming after The Austere Academy and before The Vile Village. The series follows the trials and tribulations of the three Baudelaire children, Violet, Klaus, and Sunny, orphaned after their family home and parents perished in a fire. In the series’ opening installment, The Bad Beginning, the children are assigned to a caseworker who is tasked with finding them a new home. In keeping with the bumbling nature of adults in Snicket’s fictional world, this results in the children being put in terrible situations. Their first placement is with Count Olaf, a dastardly villain who wants to steal the Baudelaire fortune when Violet comes of age. The children escape Count Olaf by the end of the book, but he remains the main antagonist for the series, tracking the children to one bad home after another.

The A Series of Unfortunate Events books are written in a darkly humorous tone that includes satire and societal commentary. Snicket writes in a postmodern style, characterized by an unreliable narrator and thematic use of political issues of the time. In particular, The Ersatz Elevator focuses on social trends and how they influence hierarchies, showing the ridiculousness of popularity and of giving in to norms, especially when those norms are detrimental to society. Dark Street serves as a setting and a commentary on both the volatile nature of trends and the wasteful lifestyle trends promote. By incorporating dark humor into the portrayal of the street, Snicket shows the absurdity and danger of letting trends dictate how we live our lives. As part of the greater series, The Ersatz Elevator sees the Baudelaires taking a more active role in stopping Olaf—seeking him out as part of their attempts to rescue their friends instead of waiting for him to strike and dealing with the aftermath. Snicket’s postmodern devices and narrative style also begin to become stronger in this book as they set up for the books taking a darker turn moving forward.

Authorial Context: Lemony Snicket

Lemony Snicket is the pen name of American author Daniel Handler, and aside from being the author’s name, Snicket is also a character within the world of A Series of Unfortunate Events who has taken it upon himself to chronicle the story of the Baudelaire orphans, as he knew their mother. Snicket also attended school with Count Olaf years ago and is an associate of V.F.D. (later revealed to be a secret society called the Volunteer Fire Department). Snicket’s melancholy but humorous narrative style both offers insight into his character and makes the story accessible to its audience. Snicket claims to be typing these accounts of the Baudelaire orphans from his room within the V.F.D. headquarters, where he feels trapped. The name Lemony Snicket came from research Handler did for his first adult novel, The Basic Eight, for which he requested strange information from various organizations he didn’t want to give his real name to. In addition to being a character in A Series of Unfortunate Events, Handler has also written his other children’s titles under the pseudonym, and the character occasionally writes stories for collections or introductions for other novels.

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