"I'm looking forward to bringing 'Goosebumps' to the big screen with Columbia
and Neal who value and respect the brand and the global fan base that
Scholastic has cultivated. What better way to deliver the rollercoaster ride of
scares and humor that the fans expect from 'Goosebumps' than with a movie. Sony'
s track record with franchises like 'Spider-Man' makes them an ideal partner,"
said Deborah Forte, producer and president of Scholastic Media
The "Goosebumps" book series returned to the top of the sales charts again last
month with the release of the first two books in "Goosebumps HorrorLand," a new
twelve book series by R.L. Stine, featuring favorite characters from the
original series such as Slappy the Dummy, the Haunted Mask, and the Mummy. It
is the first "Goosebumps" serialized adventure in which each book is part of
the same plot. Fans can also get exclusive "Goosebumps HorrorLand" content at
EnterHorrorLand.com; and additional "Goosebumps" chills at the official "
Goosebumps" website, which continues to garner 1.5 million page views each
month.
"Goosebumps" has been published in over 32 languages and sold more than 300
million copies worldwide. The series was successfully adapted by Scholastic
Entertainment for television for the Fox Kids Network, where it was rated #1
for four seasons, and aired in over 100 countries. Episodes of the live action
television series returned to the small screen in 2007 on Cartoon Network and
instantly became a sensation. New "Goosebumps HorrorLand" books written by R.L.
Stine hit the stores last month and, this fall, Scholastic Interactive unveils
a highly anticipated "Goosebumps" videogame.
Columbia Pictures has acquired from Scholastic Media the right to adapt
Scholastic's bestselling "Goosebumps" book series into a theatrical feature.
The film will be produced by Deborah Forte and Neal H. Moritz; it was announced
today by Doug Belgrad and Matt Tolmach, presidents of Columbia Pictures.
"Securing the motion picture rights to 'Goosebumps' for Columbia Pictures and
Sony comes with an enormous responsibility to the fans who have grown up with
these books and have very high expectations about how these beloved novels will
be adapted. We are truly delighted to be partners with Deborah Forte and the
team at Scholastic as we work together to bring 'Goosebumps' to the big screen,"
said Moritz.
Commenting on the announcement, Tolmach said, "'Goosebumps' is an international
multi-media phenomenon, a truly global brand that excites kids everywhere.
Children and parents alike love the 'Goosebumps' series -- it's safe, scary fun
that is completely accessible to audiences from 8 to 80. When kids think of '
Goosebumps,' they're drawn not to a single character or mini-series, but to an
entire environment. We're excited by that creative challenge and, with so much
rich source material available to us, we expect to deliver a film that will
chill and thrill fans of this unique family-friendly franchise."
Showing posts with label R.L. Stine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label R.L. Stine. Show all posts
Sunday, May 18, 2008
Saturday, May 3, 2008
R.L.stine: I was having a good time killing off teenagers
Jared Bland posted an excellent overview of Goosebumps Horroland event, so I feel like sharing it with you.
In a few words:
I can speak to the quality of the first book, and the good news for R.L. Stine fans is that it’s everything you would expect from a new Goosebumps. Classic kid topics, like cousin hatred, are covered with aplomb: “I like to make lists. And if I made a list of My Top 5,000 Favorite People in the World, my cousin Ethan wouldn’t be on it.” Injustice, too: “So now I had to sleep in Mom’s sewing room. And the sewing machine was still against the wall. So how much room did I have? Try not much.” And thanks to the surly living dummy, a cache of jokes that will be instantly added to the ten-year-old’s lexicon: “‘I like your long hair,’ Mr. Badboy said to me. ‘Too bad it’s all growing on your back!’” Indeed, Mr. Badboy. (Stine’s characters are, as always, lovely in their kidishness. I don’t know how good they are as representations of actual children, but they’re certainly perfect as articulations of what we think about when we think about kids.)
On Tuesday the New York Times ran a story announcing that young adult novelist R.L. Stine would be resuming his vaguely legendary series, Goosebumps, after an eight-year hiatus. Somewhere near you, a twelve-year-old rejoiced. (An eighteen-year-old did too, I’d wager, as they’ll be the ones with acute nostalgia once they see the new books on the shelves.)
The Times story is charming, the sort of piece about a gently strange man that, when stripped to soundbites, sounds profoundly bizarre: “Along the wall of Mr. Stine’s home office are testaments to the brand’s glory: a ‘Goosebumps’ chocolate Advent calendar”; “Under the name Jovial Bob Stine, he was the author of dozens of joke books in the 1970s and ’80s”; “‘They’re so shiny,’ he said. ‘They’ve got to be shiny now’”; and, best of all, “‘I was having a good time killing off teenagers,’ Mr. Stine said.”
Cut-and-paste fun aside, Stine offers insight into his return to the ‘Bumps: “‘I spent eight years trying to think of a title as good as ‘Goosebumps,’ he said. But he never did.” There’s something admirable about Stine’s honesty here. He has spent these eight years, after all, churning out a few different series, none of which has had nearly the success of Goosebumps. Right now, it seems to me, the man wants to get paid. And that’s an understandable thing.
And so Scholastic gives us HorrorLand:
Seems simple enough, right? But here’s where it gets complicated. When I quoted Stine talking about the idea of shininess above, he was referring to the cover of the first book in the new series, Revenge of the Living Dummy. But it’s not just the cover that’s shiny here, it’s the concept, too. I have tried really hard to understand exactly what the hell is going on in this series, but I’m still not entirely sure I get it. The Times explains it like this: “The children in the first book are invited to the park [HorrorLand], where they discover a werewolf petting zoo, bottomless canoes, a quicksand beach and other wicked attractions. Their misfortunes will be chronicled in serial form in 30-page installments at the end of the subsequent books, which will focus on different characters.”
To me, that sounds complicated, and basically like a bad idea. If you’ll recall the excellent summer of 1996 during which Stephen King’s The Green Mile was published in monthly installments, this would sort of be like tacking on an extra and completely unrelated hundred-or-so-page story to the beginning of books two through six. That just doesn’t make much sense.
But it turns out it’s even more complicated. I cannot even begin to think about knowing how to explain this myself, so I will quote the press release for Revenge of the Living Dummy: “In a Goosebumps first, HorrorLand will be a serialized adventure. The story won’t end on the final page of book one, Revenge of the Living Dummy, or in book two, Creep from the Deep. Instead, the terrifying adventures will continue at www.enterhorrorland.com and in books three to twelve. Readers will be compelled to unlock the sinister answer to all of this terror. By reading the books and interacting with the website they will find themselves also trapped in the theme park, which becomes more and more horrific with each book. Who—or WHAT—is behind the evil plot to assemble these kids? The answer will only be revealed in book twelve.”
Perhaps this is a brilliant, zany marketing scheme just out there enough to work. More likely, it’s a sign of where kids are right now. After all, Britney Crosby, the beleaguered protagonist of Revenge of the Living Dummy, has a cell phone despite being twelve. Maybe this is just what it takes to get kids involved these days. As I neither have one nor know one, I cannot really speak to this.
I can speak to the quality of the first book, and the good news for R.L. Stine fans is that it’s everything you would expect from a new Goosebumps. Classic kid topics, like cousin hatred, are covered with aplomb: “I like to make lists. And if I made a list of My Top 5,000 Favorite People in the World, my cousin Ethan wouldn’t be on it.” Injustice, too: “So now I had to sleep in Mom’s sewing room. And the sewing machine was still against the wall. So how much room did I have? Try not much.” And thanks to the surly living dummy, a cache of jokes that will be instantly added to the ten-year-old’s lexicon: “‘I like your long hair,’ Mr. Badboy said to me. ‘Too bad it’s all growing on your back!’” Indeed, Mr. Badboy. (Stine’s characters are, as always, lovely in their kidishness. I don’t know how good they are as representations of actual children, but they’re certainly perfect as articulations of what we think about when we think about kids.)
And, happily, Stine’s spooky instincts are intact. Consider his opening—“You may wonder why my best friend, Molly Molloy, and I were in the old graveyard late at night.”—which sets a creepy vibe from the start and is even further terrifying in that R.L. Stine is evidently able to conceive of a situation wherein one wouldn’t want to know what these girls were up to in the graveyard. The story itself centres around the re-emergence of and fight against Slappy, a possessed dummy whom you’ll recall from Night of the Living Dummy and its sequels II and III, Goosebumps 2000: Bride of the Living Dummy, and Goosbumps 2000: Slappy’s Nightmare. Slappy, as you can probably imagine, turns out to be a bad dude, as Britney discovers while doing research in a folder marked VENTRILOQUISM found in the attic workroom of Molly’s father, who, thank God, happens to be a professor of folklore. Choice cut: “‘It says the dummy’s real name is Slappy,’ I told Molly. ‘And—I was right! He’s totally evil!’”
(To learn more about Slappy, you should pickup the reissue of Night of the Living Dummy that is being published as part of a group of classic Goosebumps timed to accompany the new titles. It contains a handy ‘Fright Gallery’ in its appendix, which is sort of a Dungeons & Dragons-style assessment of Slappy’s origins, powers, and other particulars. I think everyone can agree that the books are better if you understand that “[s]ome people believe that Slappy has the power to control people’s minds and turn people into puppets,” that his Hobbies & Interests include “[d]aydreaming about what he’ll do when he becomes the Supreme Ruler of the Human Race,” that he rates ten out of ten for humour in the Splat Stats section (though a mere six splats for Attack Skills), and that he was made “a thousand times ruder” by the demise of Mr. Wood, his brother dummy who was carved from the same stolen coffin by “an ancient sorcerer” in the late 1800s.)
In the Times piece, Stine worried about whether the series would catch the imagination of kids in the same way today: “‘Maybe it’ll be hard to do a second time,’ he said. ‘Maybe it’ll happen again. Right now I don’t know.’” Based on Revenge of the Living Dummy, which really is a fun and fast-paced read, I think he’ll be just fine. And if they can figure out the bells and whistles, the kids will be alright, too
In a few words:
I can speak to the quality of the first book, and the good news for R.L. Stine fans is that it’s everything you would expect from a new Goosebumps. Classic kid topics, like cousin hatred, are covered with aplomb: “I like to make lists. And if I made a list of My Top 5,000 Favorite People in the World, my cousin Ethan wouldn’t be on it.” Injustice, too: “So now I had to sleep in Mom’s sewing room. And the sewing machine was still against the wall. So how much room did I have? Try not much.” And thanks to the surly living dummy, a cache of jokes that will be instantly added to the ten-year-old’s lexicon: “‘I like your long hair,’ Mr. Badboy said to me. ‘Too bad it’s all growing on your back!’” Indeed, Mr. Badboy. (Stine’s characters are, as always, lovely in their kidishness. I don’t know how good they are as representations of actual children, but they’re certainly perfect as articulations of what we think about when we think about kids.)
On Tuesday the New York Times ran a story announcing that young adult novelist R.L. Stine would be resuming his vaguely legendary series, Goosebumps, after an eight-year hiatus. Somewhere near you, a twelve-year-old rejoiced. (An eighteen-year-old did too, I’d wager, as they’ll be the ones with acute nostalgia once they see the new books on the shelves.)
The Times story is charming, the sort of piece about a gently strange man that, when stripped to soundbites, sounds profoundly bizarre: “Along the wall of Mr. Stine’s home office are testaments to the brand’s glory: a ‘Goosebumps’ chocolate Advent calendar”; “Under the name Jovial Bob Stine, he was the author of dozens of joke books in the 1970s and ’80s”; “‘They’re so shiny,’ he said. ‘They’ve got to be shiny now’”; and, best of all, “‘I was having a good time killing off teenagers,’ Mr. Stine said.”
Cut-and-paste fun aside, Stine offers insight into his return to the ‘Bumps: “‘I spent eight years trying to think of a title as good as ‘Goosebumps,’ he said. But he never did.” There’s something admirable about Stine’s honesty here. He has spent these eight years, after all, churning out a few different series, none of which has had nearly the success of Goosebumps. Right now, it seems to me, the man wants to get paid. And that’s an understandable thing.
And so Scholastic gives us HorrorLand:
Seems simple enough, right? But here’s where it gets complicated. When I quoted Stine talking about the idea of shininess above, he was referring to the cover of the first book in the new series, Revenge of the Living Dummy. But it’s not just the cover that’s shiny here, it’s the concept, too. I have tried really hard to understand exactly what the hell is going on in this series, but I’m still not entirely sure I get it. The Times explains it like this: “The children in the first book are invited to the park [HorrorLand], where they discover a werewolf petting zoo, bottomless canoes, a quicksand beach and other wicked attractions. Their misfortunes will be chronicled in serial form in 30-page installments at the end of the subsequent books, which will focus on different characters.”
To me, that sounds complicated, and basically like a bad idea. If you’ll recall the excellent summer of 1996 during which Stephen King’s The Green Mile was published in monthly installments, this would sort of be like tacking on an extra and completely unrelated hundred-or-so-page story to the beginning of books two through six. That just doesn’t make much sense.
But it turns out it’s even more complicated. I cannot even begin to think about knowing how to explain this myself, so I will quote the press release for Revenge of the Living Dummy: “In a Goosebumps first, HorrorLand will be a serialized adventure. The story won’t end on the final page of book one, Revenge of the Living Dummy, or in book two, Creep from the Deep. Instead, the terrifying adventures will continue at www.enterhorrorland.com and in books three to twelve. Readers will be compelled to unlock the sinister answer to all of this terror. By reading the books and interacting with the website they will find themselves also trapped in the theme park, which becomes more and more horrific with each book. Who—or WHAT—is behind the evil plot to assemble these kids? The answer will only be revealed in book twelve.”
Perhaps this is a brilliant, zany marketing scheme just out there enough to work. More likely, it’s a sign of where kids are right now. After all, Britney Crosby, the beleaguered protagonist of Revenge of the Living Dummy, has a cell phone despite being twelve. Maybe this is just what it takes to get kids involved these days. As I neither have one nor know one, I cannot really speak to this.
I can speak to the quality of the first book, and the good news for R.L. Stine fans is that it’s everything you would expect from a new Goosebumps. Classic kid topics, like cousin hatred, are covered with aplomb: “I like to make lists. And if I made a list of My Top 5,000 Favorite People in the World, my cousin Ethan wouldn’t be on it.” Injustice, too: “So now I had to sleep in Mom’s sewing room. And the sewing machine was still against the wall. So how much room did I have? Try not much.” And thanks to the surly living dummy, a cache of jokes that will be instantly added to the ten-year-old’s lexicon: “‘I like your long hair,’ Mr. Badboy said to me. ‘Too bad it’s all growing on your back!’” Indeed, Mr. Badboy. (Stine’s characters are, as always, lovely in their kidishness. I don’t know how good they are as representations of actual children, but they’re certainly perfect as articulations of what we think about when we think about kids.)
And, happily, Stine’s spooky instincts are intact. Consider his opening—“You may wonder why my best friend, Molly Molloy, and I were in the old graveyard late at night.”—which sets a creepy vibe from the start and is even further terrifying in that R.L. Stine is evidently able to conceive of a situation wherein one wouldn’t want to know what these girls were up to in the graveyard. The story itself centres around the re-emergence of and fight against Slappy, a possessed dummy whom you’ll recall from Night of the Living Dummy and its sequels II and III, Goosebumps 2000: Bride of the Living Dummy, and Goosbumps 2000: Slappy’s Nightmare. Slappy, as you can probably imagine, turns out to be a bad dude, as Britney discovers while doing research in a folder marked VENTRILOQUISM found in the attic workroom of Molly’s father, who, thank God, happens to be a professor of folklore. Choice cut: “‘It says the dummy’s real name is Slappy,’ I told Molly. ‘And—I was right! He’s totally evil!’”
(To learn more about Slappy, you should pickup the reissue of Night of the Living Dummy that is being published as part of a group of classic Goosebumps timed to accompany the new titles. It contains a handy ‘Fright Gallery’ in its appendix, which is sort of a Dungeons & Dragons-style assessment of Slappy’s origins, powers, and other particulars. I think everyone can agree that the books are better if you understand that “[s]ome people believe that Slappy has the power to control people’s minds and turn people into puppets,” that his Hobbies & Interests include “[d]aydreaming about what he’ll do when he becomes the Supreme Ruler of the Human Race,” that he rates ten out of ten for humour in the Splat Stats section (though a mere six splats for Attack Skills), and that he was made “a thousand times ruder” by the demise of Mr. Wood, his brother dummy who was carved from the same stolen coffin by “an ancient sorcerer” in the late 1800s.)
In the Times piece, Stine worried about whether the series would catch the imagination of kids in the same way today: “‘Maybe it’ll be hard to do a second time,’ he said. ‘Maybe it’ll happen again. Right now I don’t know.’” Based on Revenge of the Living Dummy, which really is a fun and fast-paced read, I think he’ll be just fine. And if they can figure out the bells and whistles, the kids will be alright, too
R.L.Stine Uncovers GoosebumpsHorrorland's Biggest Thrill
Fans of "Goosebumps" are sure to love the new books, which show Stine at the top of his form as he spins stories filled with creepy characters, graveyards, scary noises, cliffhanging chapter endings and loads of wacky humor. The new series already has gotten a starred review from Publishers Weekly, which called it "deliciously chilling."
While some adults have long decried the "Goosebumps" books as too formulaic and low-brow, many librarians and other children's-book experts see the series as a great way to get kids interested in reading. In fact, Stine has gotten thousands of letters from readers and their parents who say the books have been a gateway into reading.
"That's the biggest thrill -- meeting and hearing from so many kids who enjoy my books," he said.
R.L. Stine makes his living scaring children, but he's a pretty mild-mannered guy.
Known as "Bob" to friends, Stine has a relaxed manner and an easy laugh. It's hard to believe that this is the same man whose "Goosebumps" series has frightened millions of kids around the world. But it's important to remember that he's also made them laugh themselves silly with his outrageous, often gross humor.
That's Stine's trademark: blending humor with fear in a way that makes it impossible for kids to stop turning the pages until they've reached the end of his books. That formula has brought fame and fortune to Stine, whose 87-book "Goosebumps" series has sold more than 300 million copies and been translated into 32 languages.
In addition, the "Goosebumps" television series has been a hit with young viewers, while the official "Goosebumps" Web site -- www.scholastic.com/goosebumps -- receives more than 2 million page views each month, according to Scholastic.
Eight years ago, however, Stine, 64, decided he needed a break from "Goosebumps," and focused on writing other series for kids, including a series called "Rotten School." Kids liked that series, but still clamored for more "Goosebumps."
"Everywhere I went, kids asked me: 'When are you going to write new "Goosebumps" books?,' " Stine said in a recent telephone interview from his New York home. "I thought that if I could do something different with the series, I would give it a try."
So Stine created "Goosebumps HorrorLand," a new, 12-book series that connects with a special Internet site, www.enterhorrorland.com. The first two books, "Revenge of the Living Dummy" and "Creep From the Deep" (Scholastic, $5.99 each), have just been published. Two more books will be published this summer.
Each of the books contains two separate stories. The first part of each book is a stand-alone tale featuring a couple of normal kids caught up in some terrifying adventures. In the second part of each book, the same characters head off to a mysterious theme park called HorrorLand, billed as a place "where nightmares come to life."
The kids don't know why they've been invited to HorrorLand, but figure it looks like a great place to scare themselves silly. The kids soon realize, however, that the scary stuff is for real and that the theme park is populated by some of the meanest villains from the original "Goosebumps" books.
The HorrorLand sections of each book are part of a serial, so readers won't know the entire story until Stine publishes Book 12 in 2010. Meanwhile, as each book in the "Goosebumps HorrorLand" series is published, readers can check on the Web site for further pieces of the story. The site also will offer readers other HorrorLand material not included in the books, including several Internet-only stories plus interactive games.
Fans of "Goosebumps" are sure to love the new books, which show Stine at the top of his form as he spins stories filled with creepy characters, graveyards, scary noises, cliffhanging chapter endings and loads of wacky humor. The new series already has gotten a starred review from Publishers Weekly, which called it "deliciously chilling."
"It's fun to create these kinds of creepy worlds," Stine said. "And I get a wonderful response from my readers. We're also doing something that we couldn't do in the original 'Goosebumps' -- we have a huge Web site for this new series."
Writing comes naturally to Stine. Born in Columbus, Ohio, Stine began writing at the age of 9 when he found an old typewriter in his family's attic. He carried it down to his room and began writing stories and joke books.
After graduating from Ohio State University (where he edited the campus humor magazine), Stine headed to New York. He made a living writing joke and humor books for kids before publishing his first horror novel, a young-adult thriller called "Blind Date," in 1986.
He followed that best seller with a teen series called "Fear Street" before launching "Goosebumps" in 1992. Other Stine series include "Dangerous Girls," "The Nightmare Room" and "Mostly Ghostly." Altogether, Stine has sold more than 400 million books.
While some adults have long decried the "Goosebumps" books as too formulaic and low-brow, many librarians and other children's-book experts see the series as a great way to get kids interested in reading. In fact, Stine has gotten thousands of letters from readers and their parents who say the books have been a gateway into reading.
"That's the biggest thrill -- meeting and hearing from so many kids who enjoy my books," he said.
While some adults have long decried the "Goosebumps" books as too formulaic and low-brow, many librarians and other children's-book experts see the series as a great way to get kids interested in reading. In fact, Stine has gotten thousands of letters from readers and their parents who say the books have been a gateway into reading.
"That's the biggest thrill -- meeting and hearing from so many kids who enjoy my books," he said.
R.L. Stine makes his living scaring children, but he's a pretty mild-mannered guy.
Known as "Bob" to friends, Stine has a relaxed manner and an easy laugh. It's hard to believe that this is the same man whose "Goosebumps" series has frightened millions of kids around the world. But it's important to remember that he's also made them laugh themselves silly with his outrageous, often gross humor.
That's Stine's trademark: blending humor with fear in a way that makes it impossible for kids to stop turning the pages until they've reached the end of his books. That formula has brought fame and fortune to Stine, whose 87-book "Goosebumps" series has sold more than 300 million copies and been translated into 32 languages.
In addition, the "Goosebumps" television series has been a hit with young viewers, while the official "Goosebumps" Web site -- www.scholastic.com/goosebumps -- receives more than 2 million page views each month, according to Scholastic.
Eight years ago, however, Stine, 64, decided he needed a break from "Goosebumps," and focused on writing other series for kids, including a series called "Rotten School." Kids liked that series, but still clamored for more "Goosebumps."
"Everywhere I went, kids asked me: 'When are you going to write new "Goosebumps" books?,' " Stine said in a recent telephone interview from his New York home. "I thought that if I could do something different with the series, I would give it a try."
So Stine created "Goosebumps HorrorLand," a new, 12-book series that connects with a special Internet site, www.enterhorrorland.com. The first two books, "Revenge of the Living Dummy" and "Creep From the Deep" (Scholastic, $5.99 each), have just been published. Two more books will be published this summer.
Each of the books contains two separate stories. The first part of each book is a stand-alone tale featuring a couple of normal kids caught up in some terrifying adventures. In the second part of each book, the same characters head off to a mysterious theme park called HorrorLand, billed as a place "where nightmares come to life."
The kids don't know why they've been invited to HorrorLand, but figure it looks like a great place to scare themselves silly. The kids soon realize, however, that the scary stuff is for real and that the theme park is populated by some of the meanest villains from the original "Goosebumps" books.
The HorrorLand sections of each book are part of a serial, so readers won't know the entire story until Stine publishes Book 12 in 2010. Meanwhile, as each book in the "Goosebumps HorrorLand" series is published, readers can check on the Web site for further pieces of the story. The site also will offer readers other HorrorLand material not included in the books, including several Internet-only stories plus interactive games.
Fans of "Goosebumps" are sure to love the new books, which show Stine at the top of his form as he spins stories filled with creepy characters, graveyards, scary noises, cliffhanging chapter endings and loads of wacky humor. The new series already has gotten a starred review from Publishers Weekly, which called it "deliciously chilling."
"It's fun to create these kinds of creepy worlds," Stine said. "And I get a wonderful response from my readers. We're also doing something that we couldn't do in the original 'Goosebumps' -- we have a huge Web site for this new series."
Writing comes naturally to Stine. Born in Columbus, Ohio, Stine began writing at the age of 9 when he found an old typewriter in his family's attic. He carried it down to his room and began writing stories and joke books.
After graduating from Ohio State University (where he edited the campus humor magazine), Stine headed to New York. He made a living writing joke and humor books for kids before publishing his first horror novel, a young-adult thriller called "Blind Date," in 1986.
He followed that best seller with a teen series called "Fear Street" before launching "Goosebumps" in 1992. Other Stine series include "Dangerous Girls," "The Nightmare Room" and "Mostly Ghostly." Altogether, Stine has sold more than 400 million books.
While some adults have long decried the "Goosebumps" books as too formulaic and low-brow, many librarians and other children's-book experts see the series as a great way to get kids interested in reading. In fact, Stine has gotten thousands of letters from readers and their parents who say the books have been a gateway into reading.
"That's the biggest thrill -- meeting and hearing from so many kids who enjoy my books," he said.
Goosebumps HorrorLand vs Harry Potter
“Goosebumps” sells about two million copies a year, said Deborah Forte, president of Scholastic Media, who manages licensing for the series.
Ms. Forte said she considered “Goosebumps” the first book-based multimedia brand, noting that a Saturday morning television show on Fox extended the audience for the series. The TV show may also be stirring interest in the books’ second coming: when the Cartoon Network began rerunning the show in October, Mr. Stine noticed an almost immediate uptick in the amount of fan e-mail he received.
Holding a copy of the first “HorrorLand” book, “Revenge of the Living Dummy,” Mr. Stine admired the flashy cover displaying a theme park entrance and a suspicious-looking ventriloquist’s dummy.
“They’re so shiny,” he said. “They’ve got to be shiny now.” Today’s young readers demand it.
“I don’t really want to terrify kids,” he said. “I want them to have a really good time reading.”
When R. L. Stine’s characters confront a creepy villain, they may gasp, they may shiver, they may even cringe. Mostly, though, they shriek.
Chester Higgins Jr./The New York Times
The best-selling author R. L. Stine is hoping to frighten a new generation of readers with a new “Goosebumps” series.
Related
First Chapter: 'Revenge of the Living Dummy' (March 24, 2008)
Times Topics: R.L. Stine
Chester Higgins Jr./The New York Times
With his new “Goosebumps HorrorLand” books, R. L. Stine returns to the series for which he is best known.
“That’s when I started to scream” may be the most frequently used chapter ending in the hugely successful children’s horror series “Goosebumps,” which a decade ago catapulted Mr. Stine to prominence. Now, for the first time in eight years, during which Mr. Stine tried his hand at creating other series, he is back with a fresh “Goosebumps.” Can he resuscitate the dormant brand?
“Maybe it’ll be hard to do a second time,” he said. “Maybe it’ll happen again. Right now I don’t know.”
Mr. Stine, who was born Robert Lawrence Stine 64 years ago, devotes considerable effort to the cliffhangers that virtually dare you to try to stop reading. For years it paid off with a sizable following of children — many of them now just getting out of college or having children of their own — for whom the slightly scary “Goosebumps” series was a sensation before it cooled off in the mid-’90s, just before Harry Potter took off in the United States.
Now his American publisher, Scholastic, hoping that another generation of readers ages 8 to 12 is ready for his stories, is releasing the first of 12 books in a new series called “Goosebumps HorrorLand.” The author and his publisher must know the odds are against lightning striking twice.
Then again, Mr. Stine said, he often receives requests for new “Goosebumps” books.
Sitting with two dozen shy-looking students in the library of Oak Street Elementary School in Basking Ridge, N.J., one recent rainy afternoon, Mr. Stine asked how many “Goosebumps” books they had read. Frank Petrillo, a fourth grader, proudly cited his tally — 38 — and then asked excitedly, “When are the ‘Goosebumps HorrorLand’ books going to come out?”
Mr. Stine and his editors at Scholastic are betting that boys like Frank will rekindle interest in the series — which, they are quick to say, never disappeared completely. In the new books Mr. Stine intends to link the scary stories of “Goosebumps” with a serialized tale set inside an evil amusement park called HorrorLand. The children in the first book are invited to the park, where they discover a werewolf petting zoo, bottomless canoes, a quicksand beach and other wicked attractions. Their misfortunes will be chronicled in serial form in 30-page installments at the end of the subsequent books, which will focus on different characters. At the same time, the stories will continue online at two companion Web sites for the theme park, enterhorrorland.com and escapehorrorland.com.
Sitting in his Upper West Side living room after a morning spent revising Book 7, “My Friends Call Me Monster,” Mr. Stine said his prime goal all along had been to draw children to books.
“I don’t really want to terrify kids,” he said. “I want them to have a really good time reading.”
Mr. Stine got his start writing funny stories, not scary ones. Under the name Jovial Bob Stine, he was the author of dozens of joke books in the 1970s and ’80s. Influenced by the surprise twists of Ray Bradbury’s novels and devoted to comic books, he came to appreciate the way some writers were able to combine humor with the macabre.
He found early success with a teenage horror series called “Fear Street.” “I was having a good time killing off teenagers,” Mr. Stine said, when the co-owner of Parachute Press, Joan Waricha, persuaded him to aim at a younger demographic, and “Goosebumps” was born.
The books, with titles like “Monster Blood” and “How I Got My Shrunken Head,” were major hits in the early ’90s. For three consecutive years, USA Today named Mr. Stine the best-selling author in America. For a time Scholastic was selling four million copies a month.
“It was far beyond anyone’s dreams,” Mr. Stine said. “You know how it changed my life? I had to work harder.”
Along the wall of Mr. Stine’s home office are testaments to the brand’s glory: a “Goosebumps” chocolate Advent calendar, a toothbrush holder, a box of Count Chocula cereal with a “Goosebumps” logo. At the height of “Goosebumps,” there was also a television series and talk of a possible movie.
But then the relationship between Scholastic and Parachute, the books’ packager, became strained. Ownership of licensing rights was disputed as early as 1996, and by the end of 1997 Scholastic had stopped paying advances to Parachute, and Parachute had filed suit. Around the same time, sales figures started weakening.
“The kids got tired of them,” Mr. Stine said simply. “There were too many of them out there.”
After putting the series to rest in 2000, Mr. Stine created new spooky series — “The Nightmare Room,” “Mostly Ghostly,” “Rotten School” — but they did not capture anywhere near as big an audience.
“I spent eight years trying to think of a title as good as ‘Goosebumps,’ ” he said. But he never did.
Scholastic, meanwhile, had found even greater success with Harry Potter, and the rules of children’s literature were changing.
Stephen King, writing in Entertainment Weekly, has suggested that Mr. Stine’s success helped persuade Scholastic to pursue J. K. Rowling’s boy wizard. “He’s largely unknown and uncredited,” Mr. King wrote. “But of course, John the Baptist never got the same press as Jesus, either.”
The publishing disputes surrounding “Goosebumps” were settled in 2003, with Scholastic paying $9.65 million for the rights to existing and future titles in the series. Even without new titles for so many years, “Goosebumps” sells about two million copies a year, said Deborah Forte, president of Scholastic Media, who manages licensing for the series.
Ms. Forte said she considered “Goosebumps” the first book-based multimedia brand, noting that a Saturday morning television show on Fox extended the audience for the series. The TV show may also be stirring interest in the books’ second coming: when the Cartoon Network began rerunning the show in October, Mr. Stine noticed an almost immediate uptick in the amount of fan e-mail he received.
Holding a copy of the first “HorrorLand” book, “Revenge of the Living Dummy,” Mr. Stine admired the flashy cover displaying a theme park entrance and a suspicious-looking ventriloquist’s dummy.
“They’re so shiny,” he said. “They’ve got to be shiny now.” Today’s young readers demand it.
As the setting sun cast shadows across his green couch, Mr. Stine said that, yes, “Goosebumps” would almost certainly be the series for which he is remembered.
“I’m just waiting to see if kids will pick them up again,” he said.
Ms. Forte said she considered “Goosebumps” the first book-based multimedia brand, noting that a Saturday morning television show on Fox extended the audience for the series. The TV show may also be stirring interest in the books’ second coming: when the Cartoon Network began rerunning the show in October, Mr. Stine noticed an almost immediate uptick in the amount of fan e-mail he received.
Holding a copy of the first “HorrorLand” book, “Revenge of the Living Dummy,” Mr. Stine admired the flashy cover displaying a theme park entrance and a suspicious-looking ventriloquist’s dummy.
“They’re so shiny,” he said. “They’ve got to be shiny now.” Today’s young readers demand it.
“I don’t really want to terrify kids,” he said. “I want them to have a really good time reading.”
When R. L. Stine’s characters confront a creepy villain, they may gasp, they may shiver, they may even cringe. Mostly, though, they shriek.
Chester Higgins Jr./The New York Times
The best-selling author R. L. Stine is hoping to frighten a new generation of readers with a new “Goosebumps” series.
Related
First Chapter: 'Revenge of the Living Dummy' (March 24, 2008)
Times Topics: R.L. Stine
Chester Higgins Jr./The New York Times
With his new “Goosebumps HorrorLand” books, R. L. Stine returns to the series for which he is best known.
“That’s when I started to scream” may be the most frequently used chapter ending in the hugely successful children’s horror series “Goosebumps,” which a decade ago catapulted Mr. Stine to prominence. Now, for the first time in eight years, during which Mr. Stine tried his hand at creating other series, he is back with a fresh “Goosebumps.” Can he resuscitate the dormant brand?
“Maybe it’ll be hard to do a second time,” he said. “Maybe it’ll happen again. Right now I don’t know.”
Mr. Stine, who was born Robert Lawrence Stine 64 years ago, devotes considerable effort to the cliffhangers that virtually dare you to try to stop reading. For years it paid off with a sizable following of children — many of them now just getting out of college or having children of their own — for whom the slightly scary “Goosebumps” series was a sensation before it cooled off in the mid-’90s, just before Harry Potter took off in the United States.
Now his American publisher, Scholastic, hoping that another generation of readers ages 8 to 12 is ready for his stories, is releasing the first of 12 books in a new series called “Goosebumps HorrorLand.” The author and his publisher must know the odds are against lightning striking twice.
Then again, Mr. Stine said, he often receives requests for new “Goosebumps” books.
Sitting with two dozen shy-looking students in the library of Oak Street Elementary School in Basking Ridge, N.J., one recent rainy afternoon, Mr. Stine asked how many “Goosebumps” books they had read. Frank Petrillo, a fourth grader, proudly cited his tally — 38 — and then asked excitedly, “When are the ‘Goosebumps HorrorLand’ books going to come out?”
Mr. Stine and his editors at Scholastic are betting that boys like Frank will rekindle interest in the series — which, they are quick to say, never disappeared completely. In the new books Mr. Stine intends to link the scary stories of “Goosebumps” with a serialized tale set inside an evil amusement park called HorrorLand. The children in the first book are invited to the park, where they discover a werewolf petting zoo, bottomless canoes, a quicksand beach and other wicked attractions. Their misfortunes will be chronicled in serial form in 30-page installments at the end of the subsequent books, which will focus on different characters. At the same time, the stories will continue online at two companion Web sites for the theme park, enterhorrorland.com and escapehorrorland.com.
Sitting in his Upper West Side living room after a morning spent revising Book 7, “My Friends Call Me Monster,” Mr. Stine said his prime goal all along had been to draw children to books.
“I don’t really want to terrify kids,” he said. “I want them to have a really good time reading.”
Mr. Stine got his start writing funny stories, not scary ones. Under the name Jovial Bob Stine, he was the author of dozens of joke books in the 1970s and ’80s. Influenced by the surprise twists of Ray Bradbury’s novels and devoted to comic books, he came to appreciate the way some writers were able to combine humor with the macabre.
He found early success with a teenage horror series called “Fear Street.” “I was having a good time killing off teenagers,” Mr. Stine said, when the co-owner of Parachute Press, Joan Waricha, persuaded him to aim at a younger demographic, and “Goosebumps” was born.
The books, with titles like “Monster Blood” and “How I Got My Shrunken Head,” were major hits in the early ’90s. For three consecutive years, USA Today named Mr. Stine the best-selling author in America. For a time Scholastic was selling four million copies a month.
“It was far beyond anyone’s dreams,” Mr. Stine said. “You know how it changed my life? I had to work harder.”
Along the wall of Mr. Stine’s home office are testaments to the brand’s glory: a “Goosebumps” chocolate Advent calendar, a toothbrush holder, a box of Count Chocula cereal with a “Goosebumps” logo. At the height of “Goosebumps,” there was also a television series and talk of a possible movie.
But then the relationship between Scholastic and Parachute, the books’ packager, became strained. Ownership of licensing rights was disputed as early as 1996, and by the end of 1997 Scholastic had stopped paying advances to Parachute, and Parachute had filed suit. Around the same time, sales figures started weakening.
“The kids got tired of them,” Mr. Stine said simply. “There were too many of them out there.”
After putting the series to rest in 2000, Mr. Stine created new spooky series — “The Nightmare Room,” “Mostly Ghostly,” “Rotten School” — but they did not capture anywhere near as big an audience.
“I spent eight years trying to think of a title as good as ‘Goosebumps,’ ” he said. But he never did.
Scholastic, meanwhile, had found even greater success with Harry Potter, and the rules of children’s literature were changing.
Stephen King, writing in Entertainment Weekly, has suggested that Mr. Stine’s success helped persuade Scholastic to pursue J. K. Rowling’s boy wizard. “He’s largely unknown and uncredited,” Mr. King wrote. “But of course, John the Baptist never got the same press as Jesus, either.”
The publishing disputes surrounding “Goosebumps” were settled in 2003, with Scholastic paying $9.65 million for the rights to existing and future titles in the series. Even without new titles for so many years, “Goosebumps” sells about two million copies a year, said Deborah Forte, president of Scholastic Media, who manages licensing for the series.
Ms. Forte said she considered “Goosebumps” the first book-based multimedia brand, noting that a Saturday morning television show on Fox extended the audience for the series. The TV show may also be stirring interest in the books’ second coming: when the Cartoon Network began rerunning the show in October, Mr. Stine noticed an almost immediate uptick in the amount of fan e-mail he received.
Holding a copy of the first “HorrorLand” book, “Revenge of the Living Dummy,” Mr. Stine admired the flashy cover displaying a theme park entrance and a suspicious-looking ventriloquist’s dummy.
“They’re so shiny,” he said. “They’ve got to be shiny now.” Today’s young readers demand it.
As the setting sun cast shadows across his green couch, Mr. Stine said that, yes, “Goosebumps” would almost certainly be the series for which he is remembered.
“I’m just waiting to see if kids will pick them up again,” he said.
Author of Goosebumps HorrorLand spies on his young readers
Celebrated author R.L. Stine figured he had written enough "Goosebumps" books to last a lifetime.
Youngsters across America told him otherwise.
"I got all this mail from kids asking, 'When are you going to do new 'Goosebumps books?'" Stine said in a recent phone interview. "So, after not having written anything in eight years, I started doing more at the kids' request."
Tomorrow, kids of all ages across Hudson can be treated to a personal appearance by Stine himself at Weehawken High School. The free event, sponsored by the town's public library, comes in the midst of the release of Stine's latest book series, "Goosebumps HorrorLand."
"We are absolutely delighted to welcome R.L. Stine," said Phillip Greco, Weehawken Library director. "Millions of children all over the world have learned to love reading through his books."
"Goosebumps," which has been translated in 32 languages and turned into a top-rated show on the Cartoon Network, got its start in 1992.
None of it might have existed if Stine's editors hadn't coaxed him into it.
"They (my editors) kept after me about it because nobody had really done a scary style of books for 7- to 12-year-old kids," Stine said. "Nobody is more amazed than me about the success that's come from it. You don't expect this kind of thing."
"Goosebumps HorrorLand," Stine's new series, will feature two stories in every book.
"A lot of the villains are back from my old books and there are a bunch of new villains, too," Stine said. "And just when you think it's safe to close the book, there is a continuing serial that takes place in HorrorLand, the scariest place on Earth."
Stine said he thinks youngsters are intrigued by his books because he teases them so much.
"They can't figure out what's going on," he said. "When they think they know what's happening, I throw in another twist."
Stine said he gets satisfaction out of talking to his young fans.
"Then, I can spy on them, see what they're wearing, what their hair looks like," he said. "Seeing them helps me stay close."
Print This
Youngsters across America told him otherwise.
"I got all this mail from kids asking, 'When are you going to do new 'Goosebumps books?'" Stine said in a recent phone interview. "So, after not having written anything in eight years, I started doing more at the kids' request."
Tomorrow, kids of all ages across Hudson can be treated to a personal appearance by Stine himself at Weehawken High School. The free event, sponsored by the town's public library, comes in the midst of the release of Stine's latest book series, "Goosebumps HorrorLand."
"We are absolutely delighted to welcome R.L. Stine," said Phillip Greco, Weehawken Library director. "Millions of children all over the world have learned to love reading through his books."
"Goosebumps," which has been translated in 32 languages and turned into a top-rated show on the Cartoon Network, got its start in 1992.
None of it might have existed if Stine's editors hadn't coaxed him into it.
"They (my editors) kept after me about it because nobody had really done a scary style of books for 7- to 12-year-old kids," Stine said. "Nobody is more amazed than me about the success that's come from it. You don't expect this kind of thing."
"Goosebumps HorrorLand," Stine's new series, will feature two stories in every book.
"A lot of the villains are back from my old books and there are a bunch of new villains, too," Stine said. "And just when you think it's safe to close the book, there is a continuing serial that takes place in HorrorLand, the scariest place on Earth."
Stine said he thinks youngsters are intrigued by his books because he teases them so much.
"They can't figure out what's going on," he said. "When they think they know what's happening, I throw in another twist."
Stine said he gets satisfaction out of talking to his young fans.
"Then, I can spy on them, see what they're wearing, what their hair looks like," he said. "Seeing them helps me stay close."
Print This
HorrorLand stories contain lots of unexpected laughs
If you were one of the most popular writers of horror stories for kids, what would give you goosebumps?
How about running out of ideas?
"Oh, don't say it!" author R.L. Stine begs.
Although he's spent more than 20 years writing for kids and teens, Stine isn't finished yet.
The newest addition to his Goosebumps lineup is HorrorLand, a series of 12 books with two stories in each. One story features familiar Goosebumps characters; the other puts those characters in HorrorLand, a freaky new theme park.
Here's the really cool part: The second story in each book is ongoing and won't conclude until Book 12.
The first two HorrorLand books -- "Revenge of the Living Dummy" and "Creep From the Deep" -- came out this month. The rest will follow at two books per month.
As a scary theme park, HorrorLand lacks for nothing, including zombies and frozen eyeballs on a stick. Yum!
To create this creepy place, Stine drew from his own experience with amusement parks.
"I love theme parks," he says in a phone interview. "I would like to live at Disney World."
After visiting the Florida theme park many times, Stine had a fairly good idea of what he wanted in his park. Before he even began writing, he drew a map of HorrorLand and made detailed notes.
Kids often ask Stine how he deals with writer's block, a condition in which authors can't think of anything creative to write. He tells them that preparing before writing -- by making maps and detailed outlines, for example -- is one way to start.
With more than 300 books to his name, Stine says there is no formula for writing a good story, but some themes are common. As with his other books, HorrorLand stories contain lots of unexpected laughs.
"I think there is a very close connection between humor and horror," he says. "That's why there is so much of both" in my stories.
Another common theme in his books is kids triumphing over evil -- without their parents.
"Parents are useless," Stine says. "Either they don't believe the kids or they aren't any help."
His stories "are all about normal kids facing horrible, frightening problems" and "using their own wit and ... imagination" to figure things out.
How about running out of ideas?
"Oh, don't say it!" author R.L. Stine begs.
Although he's spent more than 20 years writing for kids and teens, Stine isn't finished yet.
The newest addition to his Goosebumps lineup is HorrorLand, a series of 12 books with two stories in each. One story features familiar Goosebumps characters; the other puts those characters in HorrorLand, a freaky new theme park.
Here's the really cool part: The second story in each book is ongoing and won't conclude until Book 12.
The first two HorrorLand books -- "Revenge of the Living Dummy" and "Creep From the Deep" -- came out this month. The rest will follow at two books per month.
As a scary theme park, HorrorLand lacks for nothing, including zombies and frozen eyeballs on a stick. Yum!
To create this creepy place, Stine drew from his own experience with amusement parks.
"I love theme parks," he says in a phone interview. "I would like to live at Disney World."
After visiting the Florida theme park many times, Stine had a fairly good idea of what he wanted in his park. Before he even began writing, he drew a map of HorrorLand and made detailed notes.
Kids often ask Stine how he deals with writer's block, a condition in which authors can't think of anything creative to write. He tells them that preparing before writing -- by making maps and detailed outlines, for example -- is one way to start.
With more than 300 books to his name, Stine says there is no formula for writing a good story, but some themes are common. As with his other books, HorrorLand stories contain lots of unexpected laughs.
"I think there is a very close connection between humor and horror," he says. "That's why there is so much of both" in my stories.
Another common theme in his books is kids triumphing over evil -- without their parents.
"Parents are useless," Stine says. "Either they don't believe the kids or they aren't any help."
His stories "are all about normal kids facing horrible, frightening problems" and "using their own wit and ... imagination" to figure things out.
Friday, May 18, 2007
Goosebumps bibliography
Upon hearignt he news of coming Goosebumps Horrorland series, I decided to check what books were written in original Goosebumps series. Have to say what it wasnt that easy to find - even at the author's official site I failed to see (at least clearly visible) link to bibliography.
I found a real good one at Internet Books List though - here it comes:
I found a real good one at Internet Books List though - here it comes:
Series Information: Goosebumps
Labels:
goosebumps,
Goosebumps Horrorland,
horroland,
R.L. Stine
All-new series from R.L. Stine, author of the monstrously successful Goosebumps series
Scholastic, the global children's publishing, education and media company, is delighted to announce that it will publish an all-new series from R.L. Stine, author of the monstrously successful Goosebumps(R) series-featuring Stine's hallmark combination of humor and horror. Goosebumps HorrorLand(TM), an original twelve-book series, is scheduled to launch with two books in April 2008 and a $500,000 marketing campaign for the series. The deal to extend Scholastic's Goosebumps franchise was negotiated by Lisa Holton, President of Scholastic Trade and Book Fairs, and Joan Waricha, CEO & Chairman, Parachute Publishing.
The new series will be an immersive storytelling experience welcoming fans to HorrorLand, a vast theme park which R.L. Stine describes as "the scariest place on Earth." In a Goosebumps first, the new series will be a serialized adventure, and the story won't end on the final page of book one, Revenge of the Living Dummy. Instead, the spine-tingling and funny bone-tickling adventures will continue on the Internet and in books #2-12, each of which can also stand alone. The first nine HorrorLand books all will feature a combination of frightful new faces as well as the vilest villains from the original Goosebumps series. Ordinary kids are being summoned to HorrorLand-but why? Readers are in for the ride of their lives as the cast of characters trapped in the theme park grows larger with each book, and their situations become more and more perilous.
Books #10-12 will take place entirely in HorrorLand. Who-or what-is behind the evil plot to assemble these kids? The answer will be revealed in the final book. Soon after the debut of books #1 and #2 in April 2008, Scholastic will begin to reissue original Goosebumps books-ten bestselling titles that tie in with each new story as it unfolds in HorrorLand.
Scholastic will launch HorrorLand with a dedicated website that, with the publication of each book, will further the narrative and provide corresponding clues to help readers unlock the secrets to HorrorLand. In addition, the web site will offer readers original Horrorland material not available in the books-including ten free internet-only related stories, bonus downloads, interactive games, and more.
"I missed my subway stop last week reading the first manuscript," said Lisa Holton. "When I wasn't laughing I was on the edge of my seat, holding my breath. Bob Stine has done it again-with HorrorLand he will take millions of readers on a thrill ride like no other."
"I thought writing 87 Goosebumps books was enough for a human-but everywhere I go the kids keep begging me to write more," said R.L. Stine. "I'm so pleased to be able to do what I have always done: listen to my audience!"
R.L. Stine is one of the best-selling children's authors in history. In 1986 he wrote his first teen horror novel, Blind Date, which became an instant best-seller. Many scary novels followed, including Beach House, Hit And Run, and The Girlfriend. In 1989 he created the Fear Street series, the best- selling young adult book series in history, with more than 100 titles. Goosebumps began in 1992. The book series quickly became a hit around the world. Translated into 32 different languages, it made Stine a worldwide publishing celebrity. In addition, Scholastic Media developed the Goosebumps TV series, which was the number-one rated kids' show in the U.S. for nearly five years, an award-winning global consumer products campaign, and a chart- topping home video series. Other R.L. Stine book creations include: Rotten School, Dangerous Girls, The Haunting Hour, and The Nightmare Room (also a TV series). R.L. Stine lives in New York City with his wife Jane, co-chair of Parachute Publishing, and his dog Minnie.
The new series will be an immersive storytelling experience welcoming fans to HorrorLand, a vast theme park which R.L. Stine describes as "the scariest place on Earth." In a Goosebumps first, the new series will be a serialized adventure, and the story won't end on the final page of book one, Revenge of the Living Dummy. Instead, the spine-tingling and funny bone-tickling adventures will continue on the Internet and in books #2-12, each of which can also stand alone. The first nine HorrorLand books all will feature a combination of frightful new faces as well as the vilest villains from the original Goosebumps series. Ordinary kids are being summoned to HorrorLand-but why? Readers are in for the ride of their lives as the cast of characters trapped in the theme park grows larger with each book, and their situations become more and more perilous.
Books #10-12 will take place entirely in HorrorLand. Who-or what-is behind the evil plot to assemble these kids? The answer will be revealed in the final book. Soon after the debut of books #1 and #2 in April 2008, Scholastic will begin to reissue original Goosebumps books-ten bestselling titles that tie in with each new story as it unfolds in HorrorLand.
Scholastic will launch HorrorLand with a dedicated website that, with the publication of each book, will further the narrative and provide corresponding clues to help readers unlock the secrets to HorrorLand. In addition, the web site will offer readers original Horrorland material not available in the books-including ten free internet-only related stories, bonus downloads, interactive games, and more.
"I missed my subway stop last week reading the first manuscript," said Lisa Holton. "When I wasn't laughing I was on the edge of my seat, holding my breath. Bob Stine has done it again-with HorrorLand he will take millions of readers on a thrill ride like no other."
"I thought writing 87 Goosebumps books was enough for a human-but everywhere I go the kids keep begging me to write more," said R.L. Stine. "I'm so pleased to be able to do what I have always done: listen to my audience!"
R.L. Stine is one of the best-selling children's authors in history. In 1986 he wrote his first teen horror novel, Blind Date, which became an instant best-seller. Many scary novels followed, including Beach House, Hit And Run, and The Girlfriend. In 1989 he created the Fear Street series, the best- selling young adult book series in history, with more than 100 titles. Goosebumps began in 1992. The book series quickly became a hit around the world. Translated into 32 different languages, it made Stine a worldwide publishing celebrity. In addition, Scholastic Media developed the Goosebumps TV series, which was the number-one rated kids' show in the U.S. for nearly five years, an award-winning global consumer products campaign, and a chart- topping home video series. Other R.L. Stine book creations include: Rotten School, Dangerous Girls, The Haunting Hour, and The Nightmare Room (also a TV series). R.L. Stine lives in New York City with his wife Jane, co-chair of Parachute Publishing, and his dog Minnie.
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