Tyrannitar wrote:
Well, I (finally) managed to catch up after reading the Slippery Slope and the Grim Grotto. According to my research, here's some predictions for the 12th book:
-The Flying Thing that Hector, Isadora, and Duncan jumped in at the end of book 7 may be returning.
-The letters at the end (there are 6 or 7 or maybe 8 in total) doesn't tell the tiltle of the 12th book. This is a first, because in all the other letters from the books, no matter how bad they were (*cough*The Hostile Hospital's letter about the Carnivorous Carnival*cough*) the title of the next book could still be readable. Not anymore.
-According to the ending picture, with the cap on the beach that says 'Hotel D' then it must take place at that freaky Hotel thing that begins with a D. When it left off, it was Tuesday morning. The 12th book, possibly the last, must go up to that Thursday or beyond.
That's all I could uncover.
The hotel is called the Hotel Denoument. Also, there will be 13 books.
Anyway, here're my theories...
The Beatrice refered to in the dedications of all the books is the Baudelaires' mother. In LS's unauthorized autobiography, there's an article about a performance of a play entitled 'The World Is Quiet Here', in which Esme Squalor replaced the original actress and many other changes were made. We know that LS was engaged to the original actress, but had to break off his engagement because he was on the run from the law. We also know that the original actress was able to whistle Mozart's 14th symphony. In The Wide Window, we learn that Mrs. Baudelaire was an actress, and that she could whistle Mozart's 14th symphony. Also, it's mentioned in one of the other books (too lazy to look, sorry
) that Beatrice married someone else because she believed LS to be dead.
This coincides with my other theory, in which LS is tracking the Baudelaires because he's their godfather.
Also, the 'JS' refered to in the end of The Grim Grotto might be Jerome Squalor or Justice Strauss. Of all the characters in the entire series, they're the only people who haven't been mentioned again in separate books.