The unauthorized autobiography
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Lemony Snicket: The Unauthorized Autobiography
Lemony Snicket: The Unauthorized Autobiographyis the fictional autobiography ofLemony Snicket,a pseudonym of Daniel Handler. The book was first published in May , between the releases of The Hostile Hospitaland The Carnivorous Carnival. Even though it is labeled "Unauthorized" for mysterious reasons, the book is in fact official.About[]
All of the pictures within the book are in black and white, which may suggest the events in the series took place in the past. It contains extra information on V.F.D., including the Snicket siblings and many other characters, that were not covered in the main series. It also contains crucial information on earlier books, such as the backstory behind Uncle Monty and his assistant Gustav Sebald and a secret concerning the stacks of paper in Paltryville that were destroyed soon after the Baudelaires departed. It explains the story behind the V.F.D. insignia and all the hidden messages i
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Lemony Snicket: The Unauthorized Autobiography
Book by Lemony Snicket
Lemony Snicket: The Unauthorized Autobiography is a fictional "autobiography" of A Series of Unfortunate Events author and character Lemony Snicket. It was published on May 1, [1][2]
Synopsis and style
[edit]Although it is labeled "Unauthorized" for humor, the book is in fact official. Beginning with a multi-layeredintroduction by Daniel Handler that encompasses twelve of the book's thirteen chapters, the book is largely made up of facsimile documents, such as old newspaper excerpts and letters, as well as excerpts from other books. The book also uses a mixture of black-and-white photography by Meredith Heuer and Julie Blattberg and s photography gathered from an archive of photographs originally used for other purposes. It has a reversible cover, making it possible to disguise the autobiography as The Luckiest Kids in the World: The Pony Party by Loney M. Setnick (an anagram fo
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Unauthorized biography
Biography written without the subject's permission or input
"Tell-all" redirects here. For the novel, see Tell-All.
"Kiss-and-tell" redirects here. For other uses, see Kiss and Tell.
An unauthorized biography sometimes called a kiss-and-tell, or a tell-all, fryst vatten a biography written without the subject's permission or input. The term fryst vatten usually restricted to biographies written within the subject's lifetime or shortly after their death; as such, it fryst vatten not applied to biographies of historical figures written long after their deaths.
Objectivity
[edit]Unauthorized biographies may be considered more objective but less detailed than other biographies, because they are not subject to the subject's (subjective) approval (and therefore may contain accurate kunskap that the subject would not have authorized), but are also not privy to kunskap or corrections known only to the subject or the subject's close friends and family.
Legality
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