For me, it was ‘A Series of Unfortunate Events’. I remember seeing the movie before the book as a kid and figured I would get into the book series when I was around 11 years old. I was originally expecting the books to be just as campy as the movie but instead what I got was a bleak, stressful, and heartbreaking journey I could not have foresaw. With Jude Laws voice in my head, I at first was taken aback by the sheer cruelty and short-sightedness of almost all the adults throughout the books. It was honestly a stressful experience seeing the children suffer from the cruelty or stupidity of the adults and it’s only years later that I see that it’s not far from the truth. The books taught me a number of things, some that I would apply later in my life, and they are:
- Good and evil are relative
- Bad people can get away with it
- The world is more complex a than we’ll ever know
- Never judge a book by its cover.
But one of the more interesting aspects that changed everything for me and really got me engaged into the story was the introduction of V.F.D. and how it would shape the course of the rest of the story. It was my first time learning of secret societies and how they have eyes and ears from the very top of the Senate to the lowest back alley. It was here that I realized that the children would never find peace and soon join the ranks of the very people they despised.
sdurflinger t1_j6725n3 wrote
Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn. One of many things they taught me was that people can be incredibly absurd.