Volunteerfelinedetectives - Ellington Feint Stan ༺♡༻
📁
Cleo rarely listens to music, but when she does it’s incredibly strange arthouse electronica which she is quite pretentious about.
-
oh-look-another liked this · 7 months ago
-
afterthegreatunknown reblogged this · 7 months ago
-
ven10 liked this · 9 months ago
-
panic-at-the-general-vicinity liked this · 1 year ago
-
library-child liked this · 1 year ago
-
bitter-lemon-tree liked this · 1 year ago
-
snicketsquadron liked this · 1 year ago
-
volunteerfelinedetectives liked this · 1 year ago
-
lemonysnicket liked this · 1 year ago
More Posts from Volunteerfelinedetectives
📁 do you have any about tb8? :)
Flan’s favourite film is Heathers, and she watched it at least three times in the cinema when it came out.
📂
When they were in VFD training together, Beatrice was always the one sent to talk to Lemony when he caused trouble.
UNRELIABLE NARRATORS; FINALS.


Eugenides Propaganda:
the entire plot hinges on a detail he lets the reader (and every other character) assume is true. I don't want to spoil it because it's a really fun reveal but he is lying from the first second he appears on the page and you can't trust him to tell the full truth about ANYTHING related to himself and his goals. he mostly does it to keep his advantage and not have other characters be suspicious of him but it's just so fun when you realise he's been lying the whole time
Lemony Snicket Propaganda:
(I would like to preface this by saying that Lemony Snicket is the author's pen name, not a real person, and he exists as a character in-universe as well as being the one in-universe who writes the books!) I'd say he's unreliable because he spent time collecting information about the Baudelaire kids and then... wrote books about it. He has no idea what any of their dialogue actually was, what they were thinking, or even the whole plot, he's just doing research into the incidents and then filling in the gaps to make it a story. What ACTUALLY happened to the Baudelaires? Nobody really knows for sure
While the Baudelaire siblings are in potentially life threatening danger, he will randomly start talking about his own life and just leave the siblings hanging. For example, once Count Olaf was threatening to kill Violet, and then Lemony randomly began talking about how he met the love of his life at a costume party. This man CANNOT stay on topic. Usually when a new character is introduced, Lemony tells us right at the start that they’re either going to die or that the Baudelaire siblings will never see them again. Foreshadowing is not subtle in these books. CONSTANTLY emphasizes how miserable he feels while writing these books. At one point he admits that he had to put his pencil down and go cry for a while because of how sad it made him. Once he filled an entire page with nothing but the word “ever” to emphasize how dangerous it is to put forks in electrical outlets. He also repeated a paragraph about deja vu later on in the book to give the reader deja vu.