The Slippery Slope

The Slippery Slope
Author Lemony Snicket (pen name of Daniel Handler)
Illustrator Brett Helquist
Cover artist Brett Helquist
Country United States
Language English
Series A Series of Unfortunate Events
Genre Gothic fiction
Absurdist fiction
Mystery
Publisher HarperCollins
Publication date
September 23, 2003
Media type Print (hardback & paperback)
Pages 337
ISBN 0-06-441013-7
OCLC 52602720
Fic 22
LC Class PZ7.S6795 Sl 2003
Preceded by The Carnivorous Carnival
Followed by The Grim Grotto

The Slippery Slope is the tenth novel in the children's novel series A Series of Unfortunate Events by Lemony Snicket. It was illustrated by Brett Helquist and released on September 23, 2003. In the novel, Violet and Klaus Baudelaire make their way up the Mortmain Mountains to rescue their sister Sunny from Count Olaf and his troupe. They meet Quigley Quagmire, a character who they thought to be dead, and visit the headquarters of a mysterious organization called "V.F.D." They are reunited with Sunny and manage to escape from Olaf. The book has received positive reviews and been translated into several different languages.

Plot

Continuing on from The Carnivorous Carnival, Violet and Klaus are in a caravan rolling down the Mortmain Mountains. Sunny is trapped in a car with Count Olaf, Esmé and the theatre troupe, which now includes the carnival's henchpeople. From materials in the caravan, Violet frantically constructs a drag chute and mixes together sticky foodstuffs which she pours on the tyres. The caravan comes to a halt at the very edge of the cliff, and tumbles off when Violet and Klaus step out, leaving them with only a few clothes. They travel up the mountain and are attacked by Snow Gnats, so they take cover in a cave. Snow Scouts are occupying the cave, led by Bruce, and Carmelita Spats (a student from The Austere Academy) is to be crowned Snow Queen. A masked Snow Scout communicates with the Baudelaires with "V.F.D." phrases such as "very foul day". At night, the scout wakes Violet and Klaus and leads them up a chimney. He calls it a "Vertical Flame Diversion" and at the end they reach a "Vernacularly Fastened Door", which allows the trio through once they solve three literary questions.

Meanwhile, Olaf and his troupe have reached the summit of Mount Fraught, and Sunny is forced to do their chores. She sleeps in a casserole dish in the car boot. The next morning, she prepares breakfast for the troupe, but Olaf is furious at the cold meal. Two villains arrive, described as "the woman with hair but no beard" and "the man with a beard but no hair". Their aura frightens even Olaf, and they announce that they have burned down the nearby V.F.D. headquarters. They give Olaf the Snicket File, bar the last page, and give Esmé a green object called a Verdant Flammable Device. Sunny uses the device to create smoke, which she hopes her siblings will see.

Violet, Klaus and the masked Snow Scout are now in the ruins of the V.F.D. headquarters. The Snow Scout is Quigley, the Quagmire triplet whose siblings thought he perished in the fire which killed their parents. He explains that his mother hid him in an underground passage during the fire, which led to Uncle Monty's house. He learned about V.F.D. from Jacques Snicket, and traveled to find his siblings. Violet, Klaus and Quigley then see green smoke from the mountain above them, and Violet constructs a device from a ukelele and forks which can be used to climb the frozen stream. She travels up with Quigley and they reach Sunny, who wants to spy on Olaf. Violet reluctantly agrees, and climbs back down with Quigley.

In the V.F.D. library, Klaus has found a page from a code book explaining "Verbal Fridge Dialogue", and from the contents of a fridge in the headquarters, he learns that there is a meeting in the "last safe place" on Thursday. When Violet and Quigley arrive, the three plot to trap Esmé in order to exchange her for Sunny. They dig a pit overnight and lure Esmé down with a Verdant Flammable Device of Quigley's, but uncomfortable with kidnap they tell Esmé to avoid the pit. Wearing masks, they climb back up the stream with the toboggan that Esmé rode down on.

Klaus pretends to be a volunteer who will trade the location of the sugar bowl for Sunny. As Olaf and Esmé argue, the Snow Scout troupe arrive and Carmelita is crowned False Spring Queen. Olaf and Esmé invite her to join the troupe. Though the children warn them, the Snow Scouts are ensnared in a net by eagles who fly away with them. Olaf orders Sunny to be thrown off the mountain but the White-Faced Women refuse and quit the troupe. Olaf tries to throw Sunny off the mountain but she is hiding behind the car, not sleeping in the casserole dish. The three Baudelaires and Quigley escape down the stream with the toboggan, but the ice has now cracked enough to shatter and the waterfall separates Quigley from the Baudelaires.

Reception

Stephanie Zvirin of Booklist gave The Slippery Slope a positive review, complimenting the "joyful wordplay and the quirky imaginative touches", describing the characters as "true to form, ridiculous and fun" and noting that Snicket's "wry telling is pitch-perfect".[1] David Abrams of January Magazine gave the book a positive review, saying "the delight in The Slippery Slope and others in this series is found in the way the author jauntily jots his jokes across the page."[2] Norah Piehl from Kidsreads wrote that the book "has all of the tongue-in-cheek wit that makes the series enjoyable for kids and adults alike", and that "Snicket really outdoes himself".[3]

Translations

  • Spanish Castillian: "La Pendiente Resvaladiza" (The Slide of Ice)
  • Brazilian Portuguese: "O Escorregador de Gelo" (The Slide of Ice), Cia. das Letras, 2004, ISBN 85-359-0575-8
  • Finnish: "Luikurin liuku" (The Fraudster's Slide), WSOY, 2003, ISBN 951-0-30679-7
  • Italian: "La scivolosa scarpata", Salani, 2006, ISBN 978-88-8451-635-0
  • Greek: "Η Ολισθηρή Οροσειρά" Ελληνικά Γράμματα
  • Japanese: "つるつるスロープ", Soshisha, 2006, ISBN 978-4-7942-1480-5
  • Norwegian: Den frosne fossen (The Frozen Waterfall), Tor Edvin Dahl, Cappelen Damm, 2004 ISBN 9788202234294
  • Russian: "Скользкий склон", Azbuka, 2005, ISBN 5-352-01599-8
  • French: "La Pente Glissante"
  • Polish : "Zjezdne zbocze" (The Slippery Slope) a

Adaptation

The book will be adapted in the third season of the television series adaptation produced by Netflix.[4]

References

  1. Zvirin, Stephanie (January 1, 2004). "Slippery Slope, by Lemony Snicket". Booklist. Retrieved July 15, 2015.
  2. Abrams, David (November 2003). "Unfortunately, It's Excellent". January Magazine. Retrieved July 15, 2015.
  3. Piehl, Norah (September 23, 2003). "The Slippery Slope". Kidsreads. Retrieved July 15, 2015.
  4. Snetiker, Marc (January 11, 2017). "Lemony Snicket speaks out about Netflix's Series of Unfortunate Events". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved January 12, 2017.

See also

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