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The Miserable Mill is the fourth installment in Lemony Snicket’s acclaimed series, following the Baudelaire orphans as they face new hardships under a sinister guardian. Published by Egmont UK Ltd, this hardcover edition boasts a 4.6-star rating from over 2,700 readers and ranks prominently in children’s nonfiction and literary collections categories, making it a must-read for fans of dark, clever children’s literature.
| Best Sellers Rank | #88,479 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #53 in Children’s Nonfiction on Orphans & Foster Homes #117 in Literary Criticism & Collections for Children #282 in Children's Books on Mystery & Wonders |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 2,703 Reviews |
A**K
Good
Great book,great quality
A**A
Woes of the orphans continue.........
In this fourth book of the series, Baudelaire orphans go to their new guardian, the owner of Lucky Smells Lumbermill, in Paltryville town. There they are forced into child labor. And of course, Count Olaf, disguised as receptionist, to make the life of orphans more miserable. Check my review of the first part here The Bad Beginning (A Series of Unfortunate Events) This review is for Egmont Hardcover edition [ISBN-13: 978-0749747022]
Q**S
Getting more and more invested in the series
I have come to a conclusion (conclusions are important to me). This is not a childrens or middle-grade series. Children should never be allowed near these books thanks to the amount of murder (via arson, poisoning or being thrown into a lake full of monster leeches) and general misery in them. Middle-graders would find them patronizing. That leaves young-adults and adults. And now that that’s clear, I can finally move on. The Baudelaire orphans are once again off to a new place to live. This time, it’s a lumber mill where they’re forced to labour. It’s a miserable place and they’re very unhappy, though you’re probably used to reading that by now. The thing that’s different in this case is Count Olaf. Usually, he shows up as soon as they’ve settled into the place. This time, he doesn’t. Things still suck for the kids but it’s not because of him. Not at first, at least. He still shows up later on. But that’s obvious. You can’t have a Phineas and Ferb episode with Candace, can you? Anyway, the whole time he’s not there, the Baudelaires are constantly looking for him. They know he’s going to find them, and not knowing where he is or what he’s planning is almost worse for them. I like that the author changed things up a little. It was interesting. We also got our first adult who actually listened to the kids. Not that he was any help, but still, that’s progress for sure. I liked this installment. And I like how the author changes one thing in every book to keep things fresh. I wish he would change the baby talk with Sunny, but we can’t always get what we want. I’m warming up to the word-meaning segments because they’ve shifted from I’m-trying-to-educate-you to funny additions. The one problem I had (that was unique to this book) involved a sword fight. It pained a bad picture in my head and was a tad too ridiculous even by this series’ standards. Other than that, it were good and I’m reading the next part very soon.
A**L
The best book series of the word
I seriously love this book series. I have read the book a several times but I never get board of it.
N**D
SUPERBB!!!! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
so gooooddd i completed it in 2 days(really!)you must read this awsome book by Lemony Snicket,he really explains each and every phrase properly,including the hard words,this is the best series
K**R
Nice book
This is a very good book and it is very interesting
R**H
A Good Read
Snicket brings out the miserable flavour of the books in this book The Miserable Mill which is as trrue as the title suggests.
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