Chicken Chicken (Goosebumps #53)

by R. L. Stine

Goosebumps (53), Goosebumps: Publication Order (80)

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Everyone in Goshen Falls knows about weird Vanessa. She dresses all in black and wears black lipstick. People say she puts spells on people. Crystal and her brother Cole made Vanessa mad. After she whispered that strange warning, "Chicken chicken" something weird has happened. Crystal's lips have turned as hard as a bird's beak, and Cole has started growing ugly white feathers all over his body.

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9 reviews
## 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 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 show more 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
Goosebumps generally did a great job with their books, with creepy ideas written in an age-appropriate way for its target audience with some truly memorable twist endings.

This one... eh, the plot was iffy at first, but you can't blame a wtich for being mad at being constantly pranked, and her wrecked groceries were the straw that broke the camel's back, but after that it just gets absolutely ridiculous, and the ending was just pure crap. I usually liked the Goosebumps books I read back in the day, but this one was definitely the worst.

I think if the idea had been taken and written for a Stephen King-esque (or insert any other famous/bestselling horror author) novel for adults, this idea could have been presented and worked with better.
Personal response: This was one of the better Goosebumps books that I have read. The characters are well fleshed out given the length of the story and the setting is perfect for the main theme of the book. As can always be found in the Goosebumps series, this one contains a surprise ending. This one is actually logical and not reaching like some others.
Grades 4-8

curricular connections:
#53 "It's a finger lickin' nightmare!"
Crystal and her brother Cole, like everyone else, note to stay away from Vanessa. She's a strange kid that wears all black and supposedly put spells on people. But that's just what people say right? When Crystal and Cole end up making Vanessa mad, they find out just how real Vanessa spells really are.
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.
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.

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Author Information

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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

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Chicken Chicken (Goosebumps #53) (Goosebumps #53)
Original title
Chicken Chicken
Original publication date
1997-03-01

Classifications

Genre
Fiction and Literature
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PZ7 .S86037Language and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresJuvenile belles lettres
BISAC

Statistics

Members
683
Popularity
41,802
Reviews
9
Rating
(3.21)
Languages
5 — English, Finnish, German, Italian, Spanish
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
21
ASINs
5