R. L. Stine
Author of Welcome to Dead House (Goosebumps #1)
About the Author
R. L. Stine was born in Columbus Ohio on October 8, 1943. He graduated from Ohio State University in 1965. Under the name Jovial Bob Stine, he wrote dozens of joke books and humor books for kids including How to Be Funny, 101 Silly Monster Jokes, and Bozos on Patrol. He also created Bananas, a zany show more humor magazine which he worked on for ten years. His first teen horror novel, Blind Date, was published in 1986 under the name R. L. Stine. His other works include Beach House, Hit and Run, The Babysitter, The Girlfriend, the Goosebumps series, and the Fear Street series. He also wrote an adult novel entitled Superstitious. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Disambiguation Notice:
R. L. Stine also uses the pseudonym Jovial Bob Stine. The name "Bob Stine", without the 'Jovial', is not a pen name used by R. L. Stine, so it has a separate author page.
Series
Works by R. L. Stine
Fear Street The Beginning: The New Girl; The Surprise Party; The Overnight; Missing (2020) 249 copies, 2 reviews
Goosebumps Hall of Horrors #3: The Five Masks of Dr. Screem: Special Edition (2011) 244 copies, 3 reviews
Goosebumps Collection 1: Say Cheese and Die!, Welcome to Dead House, Stay Out of the Basement (1995) 184 copies, 1 review
Goosebumps Monster Edition 2: Night of the Living Dummy, Night of the Living Dummy II, and Night of the Living Dummy III (1996) 163 copies, 1 review
Scream and Scream Again! Spooky Stories from Mystery Writers of America (2018) — Editor; Contributor — 137 copies, 1 review
Goosebumps Monster Blood Collection: Monster Blood / Monster Blood II / Monster Blood III (2003) 91 copies, 3 reviews
Stinetinglers: All New Stories by the Master of Scary Tales (Stinetinglers, 1) (2022) 90 copies, 6 reviews
Goosebumps Monster Edition 3: The Ghost Next Door, Ghost Beach, and The Barking Ghost (1997) 68 copies
Goosebumps Vanishing Collection: Say Cheese and Die! - The Curse of the Mummy's Tomb - Let's Get Invisible! - 3 Books in 1 (2004) 46 copies
Goosebumps Boxed Set, Books 1 - 4: Welcome to Dead House, Stay Out of the Basement, Monster Blood, and Say Cheese and Die! (1993) 44 copies, 1 review
Revenge of the Body Squeezers (Give Yourself Goosebumps Special Edition #6) (1999) 42 copies, 1 review
Hide and Shriek / Who's Been Sleeping in My Grave?: Twice Terrifying Tales (2009) 35 copies, 1 review
Night of the Living Mummy (House of Shivers #3) (Goosebumps House of Shivers) (2024) 32 copies, 1 review
Goosebumps Series 10 Books Collection Set (Classic Covers) Series 2 [Paperback] R.L. STINE (2017) 30 copies
Goosebumps Boxed Set, Books 5 - 8: The Curse of the Mummy's Tomb, Let's Get Invisible!, Night of the Living Dummy, and The Girl Who Cried Monster (1994) 30 copies
Goosebumps Collection 7: The Scarecrow Walks at Midnight, Return of the Mummy, Attack of the Mutant (1997) 22 copies
Point Horror: The R.L. Stein Special Edition: Baby-Sitter, Baby-Sitter II, Baby-Sitter III, Baby-Sitter IV (1996) 21 copies
Point Horror Collection 4: The R L Stine Collection - The Baby-sitter, The Boyfriend, The Girlfriend (1993) 20 copies
Goosebumps Boxed Set, Books 13 - 16: Piano Lessons Can Be Murder, The Werewolf of Fever Swamp, You Can't Scare Me!, and One Day at HorrorLand (1994) 18 copies
Goosebumps Fright Light Edition: Welcome to Camp Nightmare, The Horror at Camp Jellyjam, and Ghost Camp (1997) 17 copies
Goosebumps Boxed Set, Books 9-12: Welcome to Camp Nightmare, The Ghost Next Door, The Haunted Mask, and Be Careful What You Wish For (1994) 16 copies, 2 reviews
Happy Hauntings: Who's Been Sleeping in My Grave, Stay Away from My Tree House, Fright Night (1998) 16 copies
Goosebumps Wailing Special: Bad Hare Day, Egg Monsters from Mars, Beast from the East (1996) 16 copies
Say My Name! Say My Name! (House of Shivers #4) (Goosebumps House of Shivers) (2025) 14 copies, 1 review
Goosebumps Boxed Set, Books 29- 32: Monster Blood III, It Came from Beneath the Sink!, Night of the Living Dummy II, and The Barking Ghost (1995) 13 copies
Weird Science: The Ooze, The Boy Who Ate Fear Street, Don't Ever Get Sick at Granny's (1998) 12 copies
Goosebumps Collection 2: The Curse of the Mummy's Tomb, Let's Get Invisible!, Night of the Living Dummy (1996) 12 copies
Goosebumps Collection 3: The Girl Who Cried Monster, Welcome to Camp Nightmare, The Ghost Next Door (1996) 12 copies
Goosebumps Books (Set of 5 Reader Beware... You Choose the Scare #13 #14 #15 #16 & #19) (1997) 10 copies
Goosebumps Collection 4: The Haunted Mask, Be Careful What You Wish For, Piano Lessons Can Be Murder (1996) 10 copies
Goosebumps Collection 11: Revenge of the Garden Gnomes; Shocker on Shock; Haunted Mask II (1998) 9 copies
R. L. Stine's Horror Hour: Time for Terror including Nightmare Hour and The Haunting Hour (Illustrated by Seventeen Outstanding Artists) (2007) 9 copies
Just Beyond 3: Monster's Lunch 7 copies
Goosebumps Collection 5: The Werewolf of Fever Swamp, You Can't Scare Me, One Day at HorrorLand (1997) 7 copies
You know it's going to be a great school year when-- ;: You know it's going to be a long school year when-- (1988) 6 copies
Goosebumps Collection 8: My Hairiest Adventure | A Night in Terror Tower | The Cuckoo Clock of Doom (1998) 6 copies
Goosebumps Boxed Set, Books 25 - 28: Attack of the Mutant, My Hairiest Adventure, A Night in Terror Tower, and The Cuckoo Clock of Doom (1998) 6 copies
Goosebumps Collection 9: Ghost Beach, Phantom of the Auditorium, It Came From Beneath the Sink (1998) 6 copies
Goosebumps Boxed Set, Books 57 - 60: My Best Friend Is Invisible, Deep Trouble II, The Haunted School, and Werewolf Skin (1997) 5 copies
Scary Stories 5 copies
Historias De Arrepiar (Goosebumps) 5 copies
Goosebumps Boxed Set, Books 17 - 20: Why I'm Afraid of Bees, Monster Blood II, Deep Trouble, and The Scarecrow Walks at Midnight (2000) 5 copies
Goosebumps Boxed Set, Books 33 - 36: The Horror at Camp Jellyjam, Revenge of the Lawn Gnomes, A Shocker on Shock Street, and The Haunted Mask II (1995) 5 copies
Gänsehaut. Doppelschocker 05: Enthält die Bände: Nachts, wenn alles schläft / Der Gruselzauber. (Doppeldecker) (2004) 5 copies
Goosebumps Collection 13: Night of the Living Dummy III / Bad Hare Day / Egg Monsters From Mars (1999) 5 copies
Gänsehaut. Doppelschocker 09 4 copies
Goosebumps Boxed Set, Books 41 - 44: Bad Hare Day, Egg Monsters from Mars, The Beast from the East, and Say Cheese and Die -- Again! (1997) 4 copies
Ten Spooky Stories: Goosebumps 4 copies
Goosebumps Collection 10: Night of the Living Dummy II, The Barking Ghost, The Horror at Camp Jellyjam (1998) 4 copies
Hide and Shriek/Who's Been Sleeping in My Grave?/The Attack of the Aqua Apes/Nightmare in 3-D: Volumes 01-04 (Hardy Boys Casefiles) (1994) 3 copies
Thrills, Chills, and Nightmares/the Boyfriend/the Accident/Weekend/the Snowman (New Chills & Thrills) (1991) 3 copies
Goosebumps Collection 17: " Dont't Go to Sleep " , " Chicken, Chicken " , " How I Learned to Fly " No. 17 (Goosebumps Collections) (2000) 3 copies
The Graveyard Club: Fresh Blood 3 copies
The Graveyard Club: Revenge Game 3 copies
Goosebumps Collection (Books 1-30) 3 copies
Goosebumps Boxed Set, Books 45-48: Ghost Camp, How to Kill a Monster, Legend of the Lost Legend, Attack of the Jack-O'-Lanterns (1997) 3 copies
Just Beyond 1: The Scare School 3 copies
Goosebumps Series 2000 Boxed Set, Books 9 - 12: Are You Terrified Yet?, Headless Halloween, Attack of the Graveyard Gho (1998) 3 copies
Ghosts of Fear Street 1-3 (1 Hide and Shriek; 2 Who's been Sleeping in my Grave; 3 The Attack of the Aqua Apes) (3 Books) (1996) 3 copies
Gänsehaut - Doppelschocker 25: 2 Romane in einem Band: Bitte lächeln / Das Geisterauto (2006) 3 copies
Hello Darkness #14 3 copies
Kummitusnaapuri 3 copies
Goosebumps Series (6 Paperbacks) Welcome to Dead House, Stay out of the Basement, Monster Blood, Say Cheese and Die! The Curse of the Mummy's Tomb, Let's Get Invisible!… (1992) 3 copies, 1 review
Mis padres alienigenas & Las aventuras de Menguaman / My Alien Parents & Adventures of Shrinkman (Spanish Edition) (2013) 3 copies
Goosebumps Boxed Set, Books 21 - 24: Go Eat Worms!, Ghost Beach, Return of the Mummy, and Phantom of the Auditorium (1990) 3 copies
Goosebumps Collection 15: How to Kill a Monster, Legend of the Lost Legend, Attack of the Jack-O'-Lanterns (1999) 2 copies
Classic Goosebumps Collection: Night of the Living Dummy / Deep Trouble; / Monster Blood / The Haunted Mask (2011) 2 copies
Hello Halloween #1 2 copies
The Graveyard Club: Fresh Blood 2 copies
Chair de poule 2 copies
Fear Street - Die Rückkehr: Die Vorlage zur Netflix-Serie als Doppelband mit "Der Augenzeuge" und "Ohne jede Spur" (2021) 2 copies
Goosebumps Collection 12: The Headless Ghost / The Abominable Snowman of Pasadena / How I Got My Shrunken Head (1999) 2 copies
Hello Darkness #15 2 copies
GOOSEBUMPS Reader Beware...You Choose the Scare! Set of 10 books (#1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 9, 10, 18, 19, 22) (1998) 2 copies
Man-Thing (2017) #4 (of 5) 2 copies
Parents: A complete owner's guide — Author — 2 copies
Man-Thing (2017) #5 (of 5) 2 copies
Goosebumps Series 2 copies
Stuff of Nightmares: Red Murder #1 2 copies
Fear Street. The beginning 2 copies
رحلة شارع الفزع 2 copies
الذكاء الملعون 2 copies
Kippenvel 8x 2 copies
Golden Girl and the Vanishing Unicorn (Golden Girl and the guardians of the gemstones, No. 1) (1986) 2 copies
Kippevel 2 copies
Ghosts of Fear Street 2 copies
My hairiest adventure #26 2 copies
Historias de Pesadillas (Diez relatos terrorificos - edicion especial 3) (Even More Tales to Give You Goosebumps: Special Edition #3) (1999) 2 copies
Slime Doesn't Pay! 1 copy
Hello Darkness Vol. 4 1 copy
Goosebumps Reader Beware 1 copy
Scuola marcia 1 copy
The Graveyard Club 1 copy
Fear Street - Finstere Rache 1 copy
Goosebumps Series 2000 Boxed Set, Books 5-8: Invasion of the Body Squeezers, Part 2; I Am Your Evil Twin; Revenge R Us; and Fright Camp (1996) 1 copy, 1 review
Bad Blood 1 copy
Goosebumps Serite 2000 1 copy
Gänsehaut 1 copy
PÀNIC: la casa de la mort 1 copy
PESADILLAS: visita ateradora 1 copy
le nouveau venu 1 copy
L282 - Sede de Sangue 1 copy
Mixed Set of Goosebumps (7) 1 copy
Miami Mice 1 copy
Weird Worlds #8 1 copy
Weird Worlds #3 1 copy
Goose Bumps 1 copy
The House of no Return 1 copy
Allarme extraterrestri: Mostri dallo spazio-L'invasione degli stritolatori. Ediz. illustrata. Con gadget (2007) 1 copy
D 1 copy
goosebumbs tv #6 1 copy
Goosebumps- HorrorLand 1 copy
Goosebumps - Most Wanted 1 copy
Goosebumps 1 copy
Pànic 7: Pànic al campament 1 copy
"Wanted" 1 copy
Scuola marcia 1 copy
Pesadillas. La playa del fantasma. El fatasma del auditorio. Pánico en la playa del miedo (2000) 1 copy
Goosebumps - Season 1 [DVD] 1 copy
5604928 1 copy
Collection 4: " Headless Halloween " , " Attack of the Graveyard Ghouls " , " Brain Juice " (Goosebu (2000) 1 copy
The Werewolf of Fever Swamp 1 copy
GOOSEBUMPS 1 copy
Goosebumbs Horrorland 1 copy
The Halloween Dance 1 copy
3 Ghoulish Tales 1 copy
A Shocker of Shock Street/The Haunted Mask II/The Headless Ghost/The Abominable Snowman of Pasadena (Goosebumps 35 - 38) (1995) 1 copy
Doteky hrůzy 1 copy
Goosebumps Set, Books 19-22: Deep Trouble+The Scarecrow Walks at Midnight+Go Eat Worms+Ghost Beach (1995) 1 copy
Goosebumps 1 copy
Give Yourself 1 copy
Series 2000 1 copy
La créature des marais 1 copy
GOOSEBUMPS 2-BOOK SET: SLAPPYWORLD: I AM SLAPPY'S EVIL TWIN (#3) & ATTACK OF THE JACK (#4) (2017) 1 copy
Fear Street super thriller 1 copy
rua do medo: o novato 1 copy
COLLECTION 1: "CREATURE TEACHER", "BRIDE OF THE LIVING DUMMY", "CRY OF THE CAT" (GOOSEBUMPS SERIES 2000) (2000) 1 copy
Dix histoires d'Horreur à dévorer à la lueur de la lampe de poche (Chair de Poule, # 1 Édition spéciale) (1995) 1 copy
Goosbumps 1 copy
Headless Ghost, Ghost Next Door, Welcome to Dead House, and More - Lot of 10 Used Goosebumps Books 1 copy
R. L. Stine, Fear Street (Set of 6) House of Whispers; Forbidden Secrets; Betrayal; Secret; Burning; Snowman (1996) 1 copy
Pànic 8: Visita aterridora 1 copy
Pànic 31: Horror a Jellyjam 1 copy
Open the door to the terror 1 copy
Kummitusluola 1 copy
Goosebumps Boxed Set, Books 49 - 52: Vampire Breath; Calling All Creeps!; Beware, The Snowman; and How I Learned to Fly (1997) 1 copy
Ночь ожившего болванчика 1 copy
Associated Works
Twilight Zone: 19 Original Stories on the 50th Anniversary (2009) — Contributor — 143 copies, 3 reviews
Death Do Us Part: New Stories about Love, Lust, and Murder (2006) — Contributor — 136 copies, 2 reviews
Life Is Short and Then You Die: Mystery Writers of America Presents First Encounters with Murder (2019) — Contributor — 91 copies
You Can't Say That! Writers for Young People Talk About Censorship, Free Expression, and the Stories They Have to Tell (2021) — Contributor — 85 copies, 21 reviews
Bibliomysteries, Volume Two: Stories of Crime in the World of Books and Bookstores (2018) — Contributor — 80 copies, 3 reviews
Parents Are From Mars, Kids Are From Venus [2021 Just Beyond TV episode] (2021) — Original story — 1 copy
Dynamite No. 155 — Contributor — 1 copy
Dynamite No. 154 — Contributor — 1 copy
Dynamite No. 72, May 1980 — Contributor — 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Stine, Robert Lawrence
- Other names
- AFFABEE, Eric
BLUE, Zachary
STIME, Jovial Bob
STINE, R. L. - Birthdate
- 1943-10-08
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Ohio State University
- Occupations
- writer
producer - Awards and honors
- Mystery Writers of America Grand Master (2024)
- Relationships
- Stine, H. William (brother)
Stine, Megan (sister-in-law)
Stine, Jane (spouse) - Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Bexley, Ohio, USA
- Places of residence
- New York, New York, USA
- Disambiguation notice
- R. L. Stine also uses the pseudonym Jovial Bob Stine. The name "Bob Stine", without the 'Jovial', is not a pen name used by R. L. Stine, so it has a separate author page.
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Discussions
Found: Book about man made to feel guilty in Name that Book (April 2025)
Mystery/Thriller in Name that Book (May 2023)
80s/90's YA thriller in Name that Book (March 2013)
Reviews
## Who's afraid of the big, bad wolf?
Fever Swamp invokes a layered mythos atypical of the Goosebumps series. The swamp harbors old, sick memories of a fever that drives inhabitants insane, ultimately killing them. Given the title, there are obvious parallels to lycanthropy.
[N.B. This review includes images, and was formatted for my site, dendrobibliography -- located here.]
For Grady Tucker and his family, the swamp is full of mysteries worth investigating. His parents -- both scientists -- show more research the local fauna, namely swamp deer and their ability to survive in Fever Swamp*, while Grady quickly gets wrapped up in the werewolf mythology. He makes friends with two competing locals, Will and Cassie, and a giant dog named Wolf. The four spend their days exploring the swamp, hiding from a mad hermit, and stumbling upon mauled corpses of animals. Every night, the backwoods echo with wild howls, and the animals' corpses show up closer and closer to home, and a wild beast starts clawing to be let in....
Even though R.L. Stine writes the swamp as a basket of swamp cliches, the plot's so focused within the neighborhood that the swamp cliches never get out of hand. (See How I Got My Shrunken Head or the Abominable Snowman of Pasadena for how ignorant R.L. Stine could be of the world beyond a white, safe suburbia.) The Werewolf of Fever Swamp continues the trend started in Piano Lessons Can Be Murder, portraying scientists and science very negatively -- Grady's parents are belittling, and their 'research' is introducing invasive species just to see what happens. It was a bad habit on Stine's part that always bewildered me, but also seemed to be a trend among '90s YA and TV.
The Werewolf of Fever Swamp does a lot right despite its problems: The mystery is effective, the setting oppressive, and the cover art among Tim Jacobus' best work (it was my favorite when I was a kid!). The plot's rife with red herrings, pointing the finger every which way -- the hermit, Will, Cassie, the dog, the parents -- for the werewolf's identity, and no one's trustworthy. Like many of the best Gooseboops yarns, the twist ending fits perfectly within the rules of the story (not to mention how dark it is!), making the Werewolf of Fever Swamp one of the best original Goosebumps novels.
R.L. Stine's Goosebumps (1992–1997):
#13 Piano Lessons Can Be Murder | #15 You Can't Scare Me! show less
Fever Swamp invokes a layered mythos atypical of the Goosebumps series. The swamp harbors old, sick memories of a fever that drives inhabitants insane, ultimately killing them. Given the title, there are obvious parallels to lycanthropy.
[N.B. This review includes images, and was formatted for my site, dendrobibliography -- located here.]
For Grady Tucker and his family, the swamp is full of mysteries worth investigating. His parents -- both scientists -- show more research the local fauna, namely swamp deer and their ability to survive in Fever Swamp*, while Grady quickly gets wrapped up in the werewolf mythology. He makes friends with two competing locals, Will and Cassie, and a giant dog named Wolf. The four spend their days exploring the swamp, hiding from a mad hermit, and stumbling upon mauled corpses of animals. Every night, the backwoods echo with wild howls, and the animals' corpses show up closer and closer to home, and a wild beast starts clawing to be let in....
Even though R.L. Stine writes the swamp as a basket of swamp cliches, the plot's so focused within the neighborhood that the swamp cliches never get out of hand. (See How I Got My Shrunken Head or the Abominable Snowman of Pasadena for how ignorant R.L. Stine could be of the world beyond a white, safe suburbia.) The Werewolf of Fever Swamp continues the trend started in Piano Lessons Can Be Murder, portraying scientists and science very negatively -- Grady's parents are belittling, and their 'research' is introducing invasive species just to see what happens. It was a bad habit on Stine's part that always bewildered me, but also seemed to be a trend among '90s YA and TV.
The Werewolf of Fever Swamp does a lot right despite its problems: The mystery is effective, the setting oppressive, and the cover art among Tim Jacobus' best work (it was my favorite when I was a kid!). The plot's rife with red herrings, pointing the finger every which way -- the hermit, Will, Cassie, the dog, the parents -- for the werewolf's identity, and no one's trustworthy. Like many of the best Gooseboops yarns, the twist ending fits perfectly within the rules of the story (not to mention how dark it is!), making the Werewolf of Fever Swamp one of the best original Goosebumps novels.
R.L. Stine's Goosebumps (1992–1997):
#13 Piano Lessons Can Be Murder | #15 You Can't Scare Me! show less
## Just Dial 5-5-5-C-R-E-E-P!
Poor Ricky! The hero of Calling All Creeps! is easily the biggest loser in the Goosebumps series. The poor kid has no friends and is bullied by literally his entire school -- even his teachers! 'Sicky Ricky' and 'Ricky Rat' are heard day to day, chanted by every student he runs into. It's hard to get into those shoes without feeling terrible.
[N.B. This review includes images, and was formatted for my site, dendrobibliography -- located here.]
A new student, Iris, show more moves to town and offers an out from Ricky's loserdom -- he's finally finding a friend, but that friendship is put to the test by one of Ricky's bullies. The bully, Tara, cruelly barrages Ricky with insults in front of Iris, then fires him from the school's newspaper and guaranteeing him a place in summer school. Ricky gets back at Tara by breaking into the newspaper's office and inserting a mean message with her phone number attached. Unfortunately for Ricky, Tara is observant, catches his insult and turns it on him:
## Calling All Creeps! Calling All Creeps! If you're a real Creep, call Ricky after midnight at 867-5309
Ricky's awake all night, getting call after call from self-described 'Creeps.' The trouble continues the next day, with Creeps leaving him message throughout the school about their next meeting, about when they can start planting seeds and taking over....
Despite sporting one of the series' lamest covers, it's a solid, fun yarn. I remember having a lot of fun trying to decide what I'd do in Ricky's shoes when I was a kid -- whether the conspiracies taking place were real or imaginary (of course they're real!), and how I'd deal with the pressures of a possible invasion.
R.L. Stine's Goosebumps (1992–1997):
#49 Vampire Breath | #51 Beware, the Snowman show less
Poor Ricky! The hero of Calling All Creeps! is easily the biggest loser in the Goosebumps series. The poor kid has no friends and is bullied by literally his entire school -- even his teachers! 'Sicky Ricky' and 'Ricky Rat' are heard day to day, chanted by every student he runs into. It's hard to get into those shoes without feeling terrible.
[N.B. This review includes images, and was formatted for my site, dendrobibliography -- located here.]
A new student, Iris, show more moves to town and offers an out from Ricky's loserdom -- he's finally finding a friend, but that friendship is put to the test by one of Ricky's bullies. The bully, Tara, cruelly barrages Ricky with insults in front of Iris, then fires him from the school's newspaper and guaranteeing him a place in summer school. Ricky gets back at Tara by breaking into the newspaper's office and inserting a mean message with her phone number attached. Unfortunately for Ricky, Tara is observant, catches his insult and turns it on him:
## Calling All Creeps! Calling All Creeps! If you're a real Creep, call Ricky after midnight at 867-5309
Ricky's awake all night, getting call after call from self-described 'Creeps.' The trouble continues the next day, with Creeps leaving him message throughout the school about their next meeting, about when they can start planting seeds and taking over....
Despite sporting one of the series' lamest covers, it's a solid, fun yarn. I remember having a lot of fun trying to decide what I'd do in Ricky's shoes when I was a kid -- whether the conspiracies taking place were real or imaginary (of course they're real!), and how I'd deal with the pressures of a possible invasion.
R.L. Stine's Goosebumps (1992–1997):
#49 Vampire Breath | #51 Beware, the Snowman show less
## New face. Old nightmare.
A good, old-fashioned Halloween yarn is what this series does best. The Haunted Mask II is a direct sequel to Carly Beth's early Goosebumps adventure, which also continues to be a favorite of mine. It's the following Halloween, and Carly Beth, having lived through the nightmare of bonding to that devilish mask, is no longer the scaredy-cat she once was.
[N.B. This review includes images, and was formatted for my site, dendrobibliography -- located here.]
She's also show more no longer the narrator -- instead, this sequel follows one of Carly Beth's old bullies, Steve, as he deals with coaching a team of rabid animals (i.e., first-graders). The kids treat him like dirt, and with Halloween approaching, he hopes to out-do Carly Beth's horrific adventure and really scare the pants off those obnoxious kids.
The Unloved, as the haunted masks are known, are some of R.L. Stine's most creative monsters. Partially, it's because of the suggested mythology behind them; with a slew of masks desperate to tell their tale, we're limited to only experiencing a small handful of these ghastly monsters. The masks are ugly, warm, pulsing, fleshy Halloween masks that look utterly real, and throb with a desire to be worn. Once a mischievous soul dons the mask, it physically, painfully merges with that person, and the mask's personality merges with the wearer's.
Last year, Carly Beth wore the mask of what's best described as a demon; Steve, on the other hand, grabbed the mask of a dying old man covered in necrotic tissue, spiders, and a single rotting tooth. The old man is also emotionally haunted by loneliness, weakness, depression, and self-loathing anger.
Having a kid, especially a joker like Steven, take on the characteristics and feelings of someone so worn-out and unhappy is pretty rough, and the looming danger of simply running out of time feels very real. It's darker than the first, and I greatly appreciate the villain not being black-and-white, but uncomfortably grey and sympathetic.
The Haunted Mask books are a series highlight, and still hold up exceptionally well as creepy Halloween tales.
R.L. Stine's Goosebumps (1992–1997):
#35 A Shocker on Shock Street | #37 The Headless Ghost show less
A good, old-fashioned Halloween yarn is what this series does best. The Haunted Mask II is a direct sequel to Carly Beth's early Goosebumps adventure, which also continues to be a favorite of mine. It's the following Halloween, and Carly Beth, having lived through the nightmare of bonding to that devilish mask, is no longer the scaredy-cat she once was.
[N.B. This review includes images, and was formatted for my site, dendrobibliography -- located here.]
She's also show more no longer the narrator -- instead, this sequel follows one of Carly Beth's old bullies, Steve, as he deals with coaching a team of rabid animals (i.e., first-graders). The kids treat him like dirt, and with Halloween approaching, he hopes to out-do Carly Beth's horrific adventure and really scare the pants off those obnoxious kids.
The Unloved, as the haunted masks are known, are some of R.L. Stine's most creative monsters. Partially, it's because of the suggested mythology behind them; with a slew of masks desperate to tell their tale, we're limited to only experiencing a small handful of these ghastly monsters. The masks are ugly, warm, pulsing, fleshy Halloween masks that look utterly real, and throb with a desire to be worn. Once a mischievous soul dons the mask, it physically, painfully merges with that person, and the mask's personality merges with the wearer's.
Last year, Carly Beth wore the mask of what's best described as a demon; Steve, on the other hand, grabbed the mask of a dying old man covered in necrotic tissue, spiders, and a single rotting tooth. The old man is also emotionally haunted by loneliness, weakness, depression, and self-loathing anger.
Having a kid, especially a joker like Steven, take on the characteristics and feelings of someone so worn-out and unhappy is pretty rough, and the looming danger of simply running out of time feels very real. It's darker than the first, and I greatly appreciate the villain not being black-and-white, but uncomfortably grey and sympathetic.
The Haunted Mask books are a series highlight, and still hold up exceptionally well as creepy Halloween tales.
R.L. Stine's Goosebumps (1992–1997):
#35 A Shocker on Shock Street | #37 The Headless Ghost show less
## It's a finger lickin' nightmare!
Chicken Chicken is another entry I actively avoided as a kid. The name and the cover gave no suggestion of quality. The farm setting is exactly the place no city bumpkin like myself wanted to visit. The plot -- transforming into a chicken -- sounds awful. It is awful. It's also disgusting and silly and really, really fun.
[N.B. This review includes images, and was formatted for my site, dendrobibliography -- located here.]
Like How I Learned to Fly, this one show more was a complete surprise, particularly given its reputation as a series lowpoint. One thing it has going for it is how focused the plot and characterization are: Siblings Crystal and Cole cause accidental mischief against a young goth woman who lives alone with only her cat for company. Vanessa -- a witch -- casts a spell on them for their poor manners, leaving the two heroes with the words 'chicken chicken.'
Pretty soon -- and this is where it gets disgusting and uncomfortable and fantastic -- both Crystal and Cole find themselves transforming into chickens. The process takes days, dragging out the grotesqueness of the situation. Crystal's lips slowly harden to a bone-like consistency, pushing forward on her face (and making for an alarming amount of clicking whenever she tries to speak); Cole's having trouble talking without a cascade of clucking interrupting his sentences; they're both having to slowly and painfully remove feathers that are sprouting by the hour. And, of course, no one believes them despite the physicality of it all.
The entire story is focused around the horrors of their transformations, and the attempts to overcome it. In some ways, it's a rehash of the earlier My Hairiest Adventure in exploring the horrible changes of puberty and how that can wreck kids' social lives -- just in a much more interesting way. Many of the lesser series entries have trouble staying so focused before inserting unrelated happenstance and random events, so this one sticking so close to the two heroes and their woes is a 'pleasant' surprise.
Also, it's incredibly, disgustingly gross. Blegh.
R.L. Stine's Goosebumps (1992–1997):
#52 How I Learned to Fly | # 54 Don't Go to Sleep! show less
Chicken Chicken is another entry I actively avoided as a kid. The name and the cover gave no suggestion of quality. The farm setting is exactly the place no city bumpkin like myself wanted to visit. The plot -- transforming into a chicken -- sounds awful. It is awful. It's also disgusting and silly and really, really fun.
[N.B. This review includes images, and was formatted for my site, dendrobibliography -- located here.]
Like How I Learned to Fly, this one show more was a complete surprise, particularly given its reputation as a series lowpoint. One thing it has going for it is how focused the plot and characterization are: Siblings Crystal and Cole cause accidental mischief against a young goth woman who lives alone with only her cat for company. Vanessa -- a witch -- casts a spell on them for their poor manners, leaving the two heroes with the words 'chicken chicken.'
Pretty soon -- and this is where it gets disgusting and uncomfortable and fantastic -- both Crystal and Cole find themselves transforming into chickens. The process takes days, dragging out the grotesqueness of the situation. Crystal's lips slowly harden to a bone-like consistency, pushing forward on her face (and making for an alarming amount of clicking whenever she tries to speak); Cole's having trouble talking without a cascade of clucking interrupting his sentences; they're both having to slowly and painfully remove feathers that are sprouting by the hour. And, of course, no one believes them despite the physicality of it all.
The entire story is focused around the horrors of their transformations, and the attempts to overcome it. In some ways, it's a rehash of the earlier My Hairiest Adventure in exploring the horrible changes of puberty and how that can wreck kids' social lives -- just in a much more interesting way. Many of the lesser series entries have trouble staying so focused before inserting unrelated happenstance and random events, so this one sticking so close to the two heroes and their woes is a 'pleasant' surprise.
Also, it's incredibly, disgustingly gross. Blegh.
R.L. Stine's Goosebumps (1992–1997):
#52 How I Learned to Fly | # 54 Don't Go to Sleep! show less
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