CBCnews
Story Tools: EMAIL | PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK | Bookmark and Share

Lemony Snicket has lump of coal for holiday reading

Last Updated: Wednesday, December 24, 2008 | 11:59 AM ET

Daniel Handler, a.k.a. Lemony Snicket, has moved from A Series of Unfortunate Events to stories about Hanukkah and Christmas.Daniel Handler, a.k.a. Lemony Snicket, has moved from A Series of Unfortunate Events to stories about Hanukkah and Christmas. (Jeff Chiu/Associated Press)

If the saccharine sentiment of Christmas children's stories wears you down, Lemony Snicket has just the remedy.

The pseudonymous author behind the novels A Series of Unfortunate Events has penned his second holiday book.

And not just any holiday book, but a Christmas story about a walking, talking lump of coal that wants to be an artist.

Snicket's book A Lump of Coal is a response to the relentless cheer of Christmas in North America, said Daniel Handler, the San Francisco-based writer who answers to the name Lemony Snicket.

"There are some good holiday stories. But until now, the din of tedium tends to drown out the whining of genius," he told CBC's Q cultural affairs show.

Snicket began his holiday series with the 2007 book, The Latke Who Couldn't Stop Screaming.

'I prefer the opposite'

Handler said people are attracted to dark and subversive stories this time of year, in part because of the dark and cold outside.

"In real life, I prefer miracles and goodness. In a work of art, I prefer the opposite. I think people often get confused over what they like in one versus the other," he said.

"When you're travelling on an ocean liner, you would prefer it to be iceberg-free. If you're watching a movie about an ocean liner, you would prefer it to run into the iceberg as soon as possible, drowning whatever good-looking actors are aboard."

Children are particularly attracted to a twisting story line — even twists on subjects as upbeat as Christmas, he said.

"What is remarkable about young people is that the second they learn something, they have the ability to subvert it," Handler said.

Handler said he doesn't like to underestimate children's ability to understand humour and dark subjects. Most children have never seen Bela Lugosi perform Dracula, but they are still able to understand the humour of the Sesame Street character, the Count.

"People often say this to me — they say, 'Your references are often aimed at adults.' I say 'If only.' If only we lived in a world where adults would say, 'I believe that's a sly reference to Les Fleurs du mal, the poetic masterpiece of Charles Baudelaire.'"

Children are more accepting of references they don't understand, and more likely to go to the library and look up things they don't know about, Handler said. They also know good story-telling.

"I think holiday stories don't necessarily need to provide lessons and stories and reassurances, but should be entertaining and engaging," Handler said.

"If you set out to teach a moral lesson, you'll probably make a tedious story. If you make a good story, it will probably end up to have a moral lesson."

  •  
Story Tools: EMAIL | PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK | Bookmark and Share
 

Related

Audio

Q's Jian Ghomeshi interviews Daniel Handler about A Lump of Coal (Runs: 18:18)
Play: Real Media »

More Books Headlines

Rare Darwin book found in washroom
A first edition of Charles Darwin's On the Origin of Species will go on the auction block 150 years after its publication
Residential school story wins $25K kids' book award
Shin-chi's Canoe, a picture book about a little boy leaving home for a residential school, has won the $25,000 TD Canadian Children's Literature Award.
National Gallery looks at bookstore spinoff
The National Gallery of Canada is looking for an outside company to operate its bookstore.
Roth, Banville up for bad sex writing award
Pulitzer Prize winner Philip Roth has earned a nomination for the Bad Sex in Fiction award for a scene in The Humbling involving the seduction of a lesbian by an aging stage actor.
'70s-set New York novel wins U.S. fiction crown
Colum McCann's novel Let the Great World Spin, a portait of interconnected relationships on one summer day in 1970s New York, has won the prestigious fiction prize at the 60th annual U.S. National Book Awards gala.

More Arts Headlines

Plaskett double winner at Canadian Folk Music Awards
Joel Plaskett's triple album Three earned the Halifax singer-songwriter a double win at the Canadian Folk Music Awards on Saturday.
Kirov ballerina steps out at Cultural Olympiad
Uliana Lopatkina, principal dancer with the Kirov Ballet, will make her Canadian debut Feb. 10 at the Vancouver 2010 Cultural Olympiad
Documentary explores carbon trading business
Carbon Hunters is about a new breed of entrepreneurs working to get rich and save the planet at the same time.
Motown celebrates half-century of hits
Music legends turned out at the Detroit Marriott Renaissance Center on Saturday evening for the swankiest birthday bash in Motor City this year — the Motown 50 Golden Gala.
Jackson’s glove fetches $350,000 US
Michael Jackson's iconic rhinestone-studded glove got the white-glove treatment on Saturday, bringing $350,000 US on the auction block in New York.

People who read this also read …

Top CBCNews.ca Headlines

Headlines

Iranian-Canadian journalist talks of prison ordeal Video
Iranian-Canadian journalist Maziar Bahari says he was regularly beaten and threatened with execution while imprisoned in Iran for 118 days.
Afghan prisoner transfers halted 'more than 1 time' Video
Canadian officials have halted the transfer of prisoners to Afghanistan's intelligence service "more than one time," because of the possibility of torture, Canada's chief of defence staff said Sunday.
Indonesian ferry sinks in storm
Rescuers saved more than 240 people aboard an Indonesian passenger ferry that sank Sunday in rough waters off Sumatra island, but at least 29 people have died, officials said.
Iranian forces practise defending nuke sites
Iran on Sunday began large-scale air defence war games aimed at protecting the country's nuclear facilities against any possible attack, state television reported.
Baby survives as crash kills 4
RCMP say four Calgary women are dead after a crash south of Calgary that left only a single survivor —a baby that had been strapped into a car seat.