A Series of Unfortunate Events
Across
- 3. The Baudelaire family's massive inheritance that Count Olaf attempts to legally steal by forcing a marriage.
- 4. The eldest Baudelaire sibling, known for her sharp mind and knack for inventing mechanical devices.
- 5. Extreme greed for wealth or material gain, which motivates Count Olaf's entire plot against the children.
- 7. A person whose parents have died; the tragic status of the three Baudelaire children.
- 8. The middle Baudelaire sibling who uses his love of reading and research to help the family escape danger.
- 10. The gloomy, run-down location where the Baudelaire orphans are forced to live with Count Olaf.
- 11. The primary antagonist of the novel, a cruel and theater-obsessed villain determined to steal the Baudelaire fortune.
Down
- 1. The setting where the children are first told the devastating news about the fire that destroyed their home.
- 2. A literary device heavily used by the narrator, Lemony Snicket, to hint at the dark and unfortunate events to come.
- 6. The youngest Baudelaire sibling, a baby who communicates in fragments and loves to bite things with her four sharp teeth.
- 9. The item Violet ties her hair back with whenever she needs to focus heavily on an invention.
- 10. The well-meaning but incompetent banker in charge of the Baudelaire affairs who consistently fails to see Count Olaf's evil nature.