Like the later Harry Potter novels, the Goosebumps series was often challenged in libraries; the novels were 15th on the American Library Association's list of most frequently challenged books from 1990 to 1999 *.
The series spawned a gamebook spinoff, also written by R. L. Stine called Give Yourself Goosebumps. Several of the titles in the series were made into movies; the series also inspired a television series named Goosebumps which ran from 1995 to 1998. The book The Haunted Mask inspired two videos. The series even inspired two board games produced by Milton Bradley; "Terror in the Graveyard" and "Escape from Horrorland".
In December 1998, Goosebumps was relaunched as Goosebumps: Series 2000. However, the new series did not last long due to declining popularity. There are 25 Series 2000 books, including two sequels to an original series (Night of the Living Dummy) and two other sequels, "Return to Horrorland" and "Return to Ghost Camp".
There were two parody books by R.U. Slime called Gooflumps: Eat Cheese and Barf! and Stay Out of the Bathroom.
Front covers and most other Goosebumps related art was done by the artist Tim Jacobus.
A lot of Stine's plots are, by his own admission, based on classic sci-fi/horror movies, TV shows, and stories. For instance, one of the most popular books in the series, Night of the Living Dummy, was inspired by Stine's reading of the original Italian version of Pinocchio, while taking its title from the film Night of the Living Dead. The book It Came From Beneath The Sink! took its title from the fifties sci-fi film It Came From Beneath The Sea, though plotwise there is little resemblance between the two. The two-part Series 2000 book Invasion of the Body Squeezers is an obvious parody of the classic science fiction film Invasion of the Body Snatchers. Many books also resemble episodes of the original Twilight Zone television series, including Say Cheese And Die, Welcome To Camp Nightmare, Be Careful What You Wish For, and The Haunted Mask and its sequel, to name a few. Many books feature a twist in the end, such as the original Night of the Living Dummy, where the protagonists had spent the book fighting a murderous dummy, only to be confronted with a second creature at the end, or the first book in the series, Welcome to the Dead House, in which a sadistic real estate agent thought dead turned up on the last page, seen in the distance by the main characters. A Give Yourself Goosebumps book, Welcome to the Wicked Wax Museum, is based on the movie House of Wax.
Stine named the original Night of the Living Dummy as his favorite Goosebumps book. The Night of the Living Dummy series, which features the walking, talking, evil ventriloquist dummy Slappy (who surprisingly played only a small part in the original novel, with the equally villainous Mr. Wood being the main antagonist), are some of the series' most popular books, and Slappy has gained a reputation as Goosebumps' most popular and well-known antagonist. Later books attempted to explore his background and how he came to be created, and the final book in the series, Slappy's Nightmare, was told from Slappy's (third-person) point of view. The Monster Blood series is also very popular among fans, albeit not to the extent of the above.
The books in the Goosebumps series often include a plot structure with normal kids getting involved in scary situations and twists at the end of each story, after the conflict has either been or appears to have been resolved.
A few titles are now out-of-print, but many have been reprinted by Scholastic recently.
These six short-story collections each hold ten stories, some of which would be adapted into episodes of the television series Goosebumps.
1. Tales To Give You Goosebumps
2. More Tales To Give You Goosebumps
3. Even More Tales To Give You Goosebumps
4. Still More Tales To Give You Goosebumps
5. More And More Tales To Give You Goosebumps
6. More & More & More Tales To Give You Goosebumps
Gänsehaut (Kinderbuchreihe) | Piccoli Brividi | Goosebumps | Goosebumps
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