On This Page
Description
When Tim Swanson discovers his favorite magician is a total grump, he steals his bag of secret, scary tricks.Tags
Recommendations
Member Reviews
I have a very fond memory of this book in my Second Grade classroom. It was stuffed in alongside other titles - the Wizard of Oz series, an encyclopedia of animals that to this day I miss, Boxcar Children... This book stood out over all the others to me. It drew me like a moth to the flame. There was something intoxicating in that utterly perverse cover, something so disgusting and ridiculous that I needed to pick it up. And read it. Again and again.
Amusingly, my memory changed aspects of the books irrevocably. I remembered the black cabinet that people disappeared in, but not how it worked. My imagination, working overtime, really put another dimension in there that people never returned from. Inevitably, as with most of these books, show more my childhood imagination did the heavy lifting and made the narrative much more vibrant and interesting. But that's the magic of these books, right? We fill in the spaces and make the mundane vibrant and beautiful. There's just enough there for us to terrify ourselves worse than [a: R.L. Stine|13730|R.L. Stine|https://images.gr-assets.com/authors/1194380070p2/13730.jpg] ever did. Its the beats in between that matter most. Coupled with the amazing covers.
In this book a would-be magician and his bratty sister attend the magic show of the unfortunately named Amaze-O against their parents wishes. When our hero's idol turns out to be meaner than he imagined, he steals Amaze-O's magic kit, and mayhem ensues. Predictably, there are rabbits and children may or may not be transformed into said rabbits. There's entertaining discussing of how some magic tricks are performed, and the maddening childish belief that one can get amazing at magic without much practice if only his gear is right.
Poor boy. He never stood a chance. show less
Amusingly, my memory changed aspects of the books irrevocably. I remembered the black cabinet that people disappeared in, but not how it worked. My imagination, working overtime, really put another dimension in there that people never returned from. Inevitably, as with most of these books, show more my childhood imagination did the heavy lifting and made the narrative much more vibrant and interesting. But that's the magic of these books, right? We fill in the spaces and make the mundane vibrant and beautiful. There's just enough there for us to terrify ourselves worse than [a: R.L. Stine|13730|R.L. Stine|https://images.gr-assets.com/authors/1194380070p2/13730.jpg] ever did. Its the beats in between that matter most. Coupled with the amazing covers.
In this book a would-be magician and his bratty sister attend the magic show of the unfortunately named Amaze-O against their parents wishes. When our hero's idol turns out to be meaner than he imagined, he steals Amaze-O's magic kit, and mayhem ensues. Predictably, there are rabbits and children may or may not be transformed into said rabbits. There's entertaining discussing of how some magic tricks are performed, and the maddening childish belief that one can get amazing at magic without much practice if only his gear is right.
Poor boy. He never stood a chance. show less
Rated for a children's book level
This is an adorable Goosebumps book, never lags in its plotline, hilarious in certain areas, just that right touch of magic/intrigue. The end is a surprising irony that works. What is it with Stine and making the worst, most loathsome sister characters for these poor kids? They're all such brats that you wish something would happen to them. And why are the parents always on the bratty sister's sides? At least the parents were funny in this book because they both just groaned and moaned about how much they hated their jobs. The sister, Ginny, was funny turned into a rabbit - especially since she took her annoying karate antics to the animal form. What I wonder is, why blame the brother when she's the show more stupid one who ate the carrot? Either way, it's a fun Goosebumps book that kids who like this kind of thing should totally dig. show less
This is an adorable Goosebumps book, never lags in its plotline, hilarious in certain areas, just that right touch of magic/intrigue. The end is a surprising irony that works. What is it with Stine and making the worst, most loathsome sister characters for these poor kids? They're all such brats that you wish something would happen to them. And why are the parents always on the bratty sister's sides? At least the parents were funny in this book because they both just groaned and moaned about how much they hated their jobs. The sister, Ginny, was funny turned into a rabbit - especially since she took her annoying karate antics to the animal form. What I wonder is, why blame the brother when she's the show more stupid one who ate the carrot? Either way, it's a fun Goosebumps book that kids who like this kind of thing should totally dig. show less
## That's no Easter bunny!
The premise to Bad Hare Day isn't interesting. Tim Swanson, an amateur magician, lives by his magic trick -- he's obsessed with impressing his classmates with a small routines. He hopes to one day follow in the footsteps of his hero, Amaz-O. Amaz-O, on break from his TV celebrity routine, is putting on a late-night show at the local magician's theater. Tim and his sister, Ginny, don't have any choice but to sneak out and catch the performance. Things aren't what they seem -- of course! -- with Amaz-O's performance, and Tim finds himself stealing away the magician's bag of tricks for his own purposes. The magic, however, is much too strong, and too real, for Tim to control.
[N.B. This review includes images, and show more was formatted for my site, dendrobibliography -- located here.]
There's also a talking bunny.
The characterization of Tim and Ginny is really fun. They banter and joke, pretend to fight, but ultimately care for one another. Ginny, a budding student of karate, also issues out many much-needed chops and kicks to any deserving individuals or objects. Their parents are occasionally present to crack jokes about their soul-sucking jobs and overall misery.
Otherwise, the best friend, Foz, lacks a presence worth describing. The story itself is oddly paced -- the first of thirty chapters is overlong; 1/10th of the book. Tim's adventure doesn't event start until just over half-way through, which will lead to a lot of bored readers. It then rushes towards a humorous twist ending.
Yet it's just not interesting. Magic tricks are a pretty niche, unsocial thing to obsess over, so Tim's interests won't connect with a lot of readers.
I did enjoy the banter, though, and there are a number of genuinely funny moments in it. The small moments aren't enough, though, to help the lack of both scares and story.
R.L. Stine's Goosebumps (1992–1997):
#40 Night of the Living Dummy III | #42 Egg Monsters from Mars show less
The premise to Bad Hare Day isn't interesting. Tim Swanson, an amateur magician, lives by his magic trick -- he's obsessed with impressing his classmates with a small routines. He hopes to one day follow in the footsteps of his hero, Amaz-O. Amaz-O, on break from his TV celebrity routine, is putting on a late-night show at the local magician's theater. Tim and his sister, Ginny, don't have any choice but to sneak out and catch the performance. Things aren't what they seem -- of course! -- with Amaz-O's performance, and Tim finds himself stealing away the magician's bag of tricks for his own purposes. The magic, however, is much too strong, and too real, for Tim to control.
[N.B. This review includes images, and show more was formatted for my site, dendrobibliography -- located here.]
There's also a talking bunny.
The characterization of Tim and Ginny is really fun. They banter and joke, pretend to fight, but ultimately care for one another. Ginny, a budding student of karate, also issues out many much-needed chops and kicks to any deserving individuals or objects. Their parents are occasionally present to crack jokes about their soul-sucking jobs and overall misery.
Otherwise, the best friend, Foz, lacks a presence worth describing. The story itself is oddly paced -- the first of thirty chapters is overlong; 1/10th of the book. Tim's adventure doesn't event start until just over half-way through, which will lead to a lot of bored readers. It then rushes towards a humorous twist ending.
Yet it's just not interesting. Magic tricks are a pretty niche, unsocial thing to obsess over, so Tim's interests won't connect with a lot of readers.
I did enjoy the banter, though, and there are a number of genuinely funny moments in it. The small moments aren't enough, though, to help the lack of both scares and story.
R.L. Stine's Goosebumps (1992–1997):
#40 Night of the Living Dummy III | #42 Egg Monsters from Mars show less
Don't steal stuff from people, especially magicians. The twist ending may be predictable to those who have read enough Goosebumps books, but still a pretty fun read.
This is an example of why I got tired of Goosebumps- no ghost story here- just cheesy paranormal. Tim is a kid obsessed with magic, who steals a magic kit of his favorite magician when he's ignored. The magician's kit is a little too real, and so is the magic- especially when Tim is turned into a rabbit to replace the magician.
#41 "He's no Easter bunny!"
Tim Swanson loves magic tricks and one day wants to be a real magician just like his idol Amaz-O the Magician. When he goes to one of his shows he finds out that his childhood hero is really a grumpy old man. Depressed and determined to be a better magician, Tim steals Amaz-O's bag of tricks. But this might be the last time he ever performs a magic trick.
Tim Swanson loves magic tricks and one day wants to be a real magician just like his idol Amaz-O the Magician. When he goes to one of his shows he finds out that his childhood hero is really a grumpy old man. Depressed and determined to be a better magician, Tim steals Amaz-O's bag of tricks. But this might be the last time he ever performs a magic trick.
Goosebumps. This is the series that kept me reading through my childhood. More than any other series, Goosebumps kept me interested in reading, and R.L. Stein is a wonderful children's writer. I applaud his efforts, and can't express enough my gratitude for the series.
Members
- Recently Added By
Lists
Reader Beware....Favorite Goosebumps
253 works; 1 member
Books Read in 2020
4,379 works; 123 members
Gateway Horror
496 works; 3 members
Eerie eTales
192 works; 3 members
Author Information

1,063+ Works 184,160 Members
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 humor magazine which he worked on for ten years. show more 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
Series
Work Relationships
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Bad Hare Day (Goosebumps #41) (Goosebumps #41)
- Original title
- Bad Hare Day
- Original publication date
- 1996-03-01
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 1,184
- Popularity
- 21,021
- Reviews
- 11
- Rating
- (3.16)
- Languages
- 6 — English, French, German, Italian, Norwegian (Bokmål), Spanish
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 27
- ASINs
- 4
























































