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Monday, October 31, 2011

Memory Monday- R.L. Stine

Best Friend 2 (Fear Street, #50)What better bookish memory to talk about on Halloween than R.L. Stine?! Seriously. When I was a kid he was the big deal. In 5th and 6th grade, all the kids I knew were reading R.L. Stine. We were too 'old and mature' to read the silly old Goosebumps books, but those Fear Street stories were deliciously creepy and freaky, especially because really, for the most part, it was stuff that could actually happen. No creepy nasties under the bed. Oh no. We are talking psycho crazy best friends, stalkers, wannabees and more. Some of them did dabble a bit into the paranormal, but it was all much more subtle in the Fear Street series than in Goosebumps.

Let's Party (Fear Street Seniors, #1)I remember reading his Seniors series. One of the girls in the Fear Street senior class has a vision, of all the seniors lying in coffins by graduation day. Some people believe her, because apparently (if I'm remembering right) her family has a history of eerily accurate visions, but a lot of people scoff. And then, one by one, the seniors do start dying. The beginning of each book includes a 'yearbook page' with all the senior pictures. And with each new book, more and more of their pictures are altered as the students die.

There were 12 books, and I read 10 of them. This is the only series to date that I remember knowingly reading out of order. The books were in such high demand by all the morbid 5th and 6th graders out there, just itching to get their hands on the books that if you waited to read them in order, you'd never get a chance to read them at all. But I did resist the last book in the series, wanting the conclusion to be the actual conclusion. But book 10 never came and never came, and then I moved and no one in Idaho seemed to be as consumed with the thrill of R.L. Stine the way the kids in Western Washington were and the library didn't carry the series and I couldn't find the books and so I just... never finished reading them. I still don't know if the whole senior class ended up dead. I have no idea how it ended. And ya. It bugs.
In Too Deep (Fear Street Seniors, #2)
Any of you read R.L. Stine? What about the Seniors series? For how popular I remember them being as a kid, I have met very, very few people since then that have heard of them, let alone read them. Makes me wonder if I exaggerate their popularity in my mind, but somehow doubt I could be misrecollecting the annoyance when non of the books were on the shelves, or the only one you could find was the one you'd read three books ago or who incredibly exciting it was to find a new one sitting there, just waiting to be snatched, read and inhaled by you!! Don't ask my why, when I had my library card memorized by age 9 because I put so many book on hold, I didn't think to put these books on hold, because I couldn't tell you. But I can tell you that the searching, the looking and the finding was so exciting, almost as much fun as reading the books themselves. This is definitely a series I'm going to have to revisit. Maybe I'll actually read them in order this time. At the very least, now that I can't remember any of their names or stories, at least I'll know if someone manages to escape the vision. 

7 comments:

  1. Dude, I totally read R.L. Stine AND Christopher Pike. Like a BEAST. Couldn't get enough. I was an R.L. Stine and Christopher Pike readin' machine at school along with all my friends. It was so awesome...

    ...and then at home, I couldn't sleep if I could actually SEE the books. Like, I had to have the book covers COVERED UP and sometimes out of my bedroom completely. I'd have to throw a shirt over them or something. Outta sight, outta mind. I was obsessive about this. And yeah, it was uncool. But I'm just being honest.

    ~Asheley

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  2. Also, I *know* this post was about R.L. Stine and not Christopher Pike, but see at MY school - everyone was reading both of these authors, so they pretty much went together. That's why I'm grouping them in my comment. :)

    ~Asheley

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  3. I remember how extremely popular Goosebumps were! We even had a Goosebumps tv show (which I was not *allowed* to watch). I wish I could have read them when I was younger. I snuck a few tv shows and they were so creative and fun!

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  4. True story, when my cousin would come to visit for the summer the whole way from South Carolina (I live in PA), she and my uncle would stay at my gramma's house. Her and I used to go to my gramma's library and check out as many Fear Street books as we could between the two of us and sneak them into the house because my gramma thought they were "too scary" for us at that age.

    We were obsessed with those books!

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  5. I read a few of the R.L. Stine but I didn't finish a series. I also read Christopher Pike! :) I was too old for Goosebumps once those came along. This was a great trip down memory lane!
    ~ Jen @ A Book and a Latte

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  6. Wow, this brought some flashbacks, haha. I know I read a few R.L. Stine books when I was little, but I honestly can't remember which ones. I might even have a few of the books somewhere.

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  7. LOVED Goosebumps when I was a kid, but I didn't get to any of his other work. Great post!

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