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 Goosebumps the Movie
Goosebumps the Movie Read online
    CONTENTS
   TITLE PAGE
   INTRODUCTION
   CHAPTER 1
   CHAPTER 2
   CHAPTER 3
   CHAPTER 4
   CHAPTER 5
   CHAPTER 6
   CHAPTER 7
   CHAPTER 8
   CHAPTER 9
   CHAPTER 10
   CHAPTER 11
   CHAPTER 12
   CHAPTER 13
   CHAPTER 14
   CHAPTER 15
   CHAPTER 16
   CHAPTER 17
   CHAPTER 18
   CHAPTER 19
   CHAPTER 20
   CHAPTER 21
   CHAPTER 22
   CHAPTER 23
   CHAPTER 24
   CHAPTER 25
   CHAPTER 26
   CHAPTER 27
   CHAPTER 28
   CHAPTER 29
   CHAPTER 30
   CHAPTER 31
   CHAPTER 32
   CHAPTER 33
   CHAPTER 34
   PICTURE SECTION
   COPYRIGHT
   I had a nightmare last night. I dreamed that I was writing the introduction to this book. Behind me, someone murmured the strange words that bring Slappy, the evil dummy, to life: “Karru Marri Odonna Loma Molonu Karrano.”
   I heard those frightening words in my dream, and I woke up shivering. I spun around, expecting the dummy with his cruel grin and cold stare to be standing there, ready to terrorize me. But … no sign of him.
   Luckily, nightmares like that don’t come true.
   The next morning, I had some good news. I hurried to tell my wife, Jane. “Jack Black is going to play ME in the Goosebumps movie,” I said. “Jack Black is hilarious!”
   Jane nodded.
   “He’s wonderful. He’s terrific! He’ll be a great ME!” I exclaimed, thumping the breakfast table with my fist.
   The dog looked up from her first nap of the day, wondering what the fuss was about.
   “I wonder how he’ll play me,” I said, my mind spinning. “Sophisticated, maybe? Darkly mysterious? An evil genius?”
   “Probably as a lunatic,” Jane said. “Or is that too real?”
   A few weeks later, Jack flew in to New York City, where I live, and we had lunch. We had a good conversation and a lot of laughs.
   “I know how I’m going to play you,” Jack told me over dessert. “I’m going to play you as you—only a lot more sinister.”
   That sounded right to me. In person, I’m not very sinister. An Ohio newspaper once wrote: “In person, R.L. Stine is about as scary as an optometrist.” I’m basically a jolly guy who likes to sit at a keyboard all day and write things to frighten children.
   I was delighted that Jack Black would star in the Goosebumps movie. And just as delighted when the three teenagers in the story were cast. Dylan Minnette, Odeya Rush, and Ryan Lee were all seventeen and extremely talented and nice. I had a lot of fun talking with them on the set in Atlanta, where the movie was filmed.
   Since the movie was announced, everyone asks me this question: Which book is the movie about?
   This was a difficult decision. And the question had to be answered before the movie could be written. Which story should the movie tell? Which evil character should star in the film?
   Should it be one of the Slappy the Dummy books? The Haunted Mask? Welcome to Horrorland? One of the Monster Blood tales? Dr. Maniac? Murder the Clown? Those nasty little lawn gnomes?
   I’ve written more than 125 Goosebumps books. So choosing one of them for the film was a hard decision, to say the least.
   Then the script-writing team had a brilliant idea: “Why should we base the movie on one book? Let’s try to squeeze as many of the Goosebumps characters into the story as we can.”
   And that’s just what happened.
   The writers set up a major challenge for themselves: Use dozens of monsters and villains and crazy creatures from the Goosebumps books. Create a story in which R.L. Stine and the teenagers have to battle just about every bad-news character ever to appear.
   Yes, all in one movie: the Abominable Snowman of Pasadena, the gigantic praying mantis from A Shocker on Shock Street, plus Slappy at his most cacklingest, zombies, staggering scarecrows, the Werewolf of Fever Swamp, and nasty lawn gnomes everywhere you look.
   How will these creatures ever be defeated and sent back to where they came from? Well … that’s what the film is all about.
   This book tells the whole story. It has all the scares and all the laughs—and all the surprises and startling twists—you’ll see in the movie. And you’ll also find …
   HEY! WAIT!
   What are you doing here? Slappy! Get away! Get out of here! Nightmares don’t come true! Slappy—please …
   THANKS FOR THE WARM WELCOME, R.L. I’M HAPPY TO SEE YOU, TOO. YOU KNOW WHAT R.L. STANDS FOR, DON’T YOU? REAL LOSER. HA-HA-HA.
   YOU’RE LOOKING GOOD, R.L. IS THAT YOUR NOSE, OR ARE YOU EATING A TOADSTOOL? I LIKE WHAT YOU DID WITH YOUR HAIR. AND NOTICE I SAID HAIR, NOT HAIRS! HA-HA-HA. YOU KNOW, I’VE SEEN BETTER SKIN ON AN ONION! HA-HA.
   ACTUALLY, I’M KIDDING. I THINK YOU’RE PRETTY. PRETTY UGLY! HA-HA-HA.
   DOES YOUR FACE HURT? IT’S KILLING ME! HA-HA-HA.
   BUT ENOUGH POLITE CONVERSATION: I JUST CAME TO TELL EVERYONE WHO THE REAL STAR OF THE MOVIE IS. LET ME GIVE YOU ALL A HINT. IT’S NOT SPELLED R.L. HA-HA-HA.
   ENJOY THIS BOOK, EVERYONE. I’M SURE YOU’LL LOVE FINDING OUT WHO THE REAL DUMMY IS!
   I never believed we would actually move away from New York City. Not when my mom put her arm around me and said, “Zach, we need a fresh start.” Not when she told me my aunt Lorraine lived in the perfect little town for us and had found her a great job. Not until we packed all our stuff into a U-Haul, hooked it up to the back of the station wagon, and drove away.
   Can you blame me? I mean, who ditches New York City to go live in some tiny, dead-end, drop-dead-boring town in the middle of nowhere?
   My mom, Gale Cooper, that’s who.
   And for some reason, she had to drag me along for the ride.
   My mom promised me I’d love Madison as soon as I saw it. Here’s what I saw as our car chugged across some rusty old bridge into town:
   A sign reading WELCOME TO MADISON, POPULATION 28,245.
   Translation: Welcome to Nowheresville, Population YOU.
   A cutesy little downtown with about four buildings and the same number of people.
   A strip of restaurants, including a noodle shop advertising “Sushi Wednesdays!” My stomach churned just thinking about what might pass for sushi here.
   My mom was gazing through the windshield all star-struck, like we were driving straight through Times Square. “You know what I love about this place? No franchises. That’s refreshing.”
   I slumped down in the passenger seat. “Did we go back in time when we crossed that bridge? Are we sure they have Wi-Fi?”
   “No, Zach, families just sit around and listen to the radio by candlelight.” My mom grinned.
   Very funny, Mom.
   “Are you positive there weren’t any other places looking for vice principals?” I asked. “Maybe Guantanamo Bay? North Korea?”
   She just laughed.
   We pulled up to a red light, right beside a Madison Township cop car. The two cops inside were fast asleep. This was clearly the kind of town where nothing ever happened, or I might have started to worry.
   Our new house was … pretty much a typical house. Yard, picket fence, welcome mat. I groaned. This was going to feel like living inside a sitcom.
   “Look, a yard!” my mom said. She’s even better at fake enthusiasm than she is at bad jokes. They must teach it at vice principal school. “You’d never have something like this in New York!”
   “Mom, you don’t have to kee
p selling me on this place.” I hoisted one of the boxes out of the trunk. “I’m staying. Because I love you—”
   “Aww, honey, I love you.”
   “—and I looked into it,” I added, grinning. “Legally, I can’t live on my own until I’m eighteen.”
   She shook her head and went inside. I took a moment to look around, trying to bend my mind around it: This is your life.
   There was a flicker of movement in the next-door neighbor’s window. At least, I thought there was. But as soon as I turned to look, everything went still. There was no one there.
   Great. Spying neighbors. One more thing to love about small-town life. In New York City, you were never really alone—but you got really good at ignoring everyone around you, and they got good at ignoring you. Just the way I liked it.
   The inside of the house was pretty much what you’d expect from the outside. Sitcom-style suburban living.
   “Look at this kitchen!” my mom said, spinning in circles around the huge room. “It’s bigger than our old apartment.”
   She was right about that. It was huge. Every room in the house was huge compared to what I was used to.
   Waste of space, if you ask me.
   “We don’t cook,” I reminded her.
   “But look at all this counter space to put the takeout on!” Then she paused, cocking her ear to one side. “Do you hear that?”
   I listened hard. “Uh … I don’t hear anything.”
   “Exactly.”
   I knew what she meant. In New York, you were never far from the noise of sirens, trucks backing up, construction drills, cars honking, drivers shouting, doors slamming—people living, and doing it basically right on top of you. In Madison, there was nothing but chirping birds and a soft whisper of wind.
   So I got it. I just didn’t understand why she liked it.
   “Live, from New York …” a voice intoned behind me. I whirled around to see Aunt Lorraine, talking into her fist as if it were a microphone. “… it’s my sister, Gale, with special guest, my nephew, Zach!”
   “Hey, Aunt Lorraine.” I wondered if she’d notice if I inched backward a little. Aunt Lorraine was a cheek-pincher. “Nice to see you.”
   “Gale, he gets more handsome every time I see him,” she gushed. “So good-looking!”
   “Thanks, Aunt Lorraine.”
   Just to be clear: I’m not handsome. The only people who think I am good-looking are related to me.
   “Just a beautiful boy,” she said. “And let’s be honest, you were an ugly baby.”
   Uh … thanks?
   “Lorraine …” My mom shook her head.
   “It’s fine,” my aunt insisted. “He’s handsome now, and it’s not like he’s gonna go back to being ugly. Handsome isn’t a phase. No one goes ugly, handsome, then back to ugly. The danger’s passed.” She looked into the distance for a moment, and I could tell—from the way she wrinkled her nose—that she was remembering my baby pictures. “What an ugly baby.”
   “Yes, Aunt Lorraine, you bring that up every time you see me.”
   “Ooh, I almost forgot!” She rifled through her shopping bag and pulled out a Yankees cap. A bedazzled Yankees cap, glistening with the sparkle of a million plastic rhinestones. “From my new signature men’s line!”
   She slipped it onto my head.
   “Very … thoughtful,” my mom said. I could tell she was trying to not laugh. She gestured at me. “Say thank you.”
   There were a whole lot of things I wanted to say about that hat. Thank you wasn’t high on the list.
   “It’s a limited edition,” Aunt Lorraine said proudly. “You won’t see a lot of men wearing that hat.”
   “I can’t imagine I’ll see anyone wearing it,” I mumbled. “I’m, uh, going to go unload the car now.”
   I got out of there fast, leaving my mother and her sister to catch up. Maybe talk some more about how handsome I was these days. Especially in my sparkly new cap.
   I managed to stack about three boxes and make it halfway back up the driveway when I felt the bottom of the first box start to give way. Uh-oh. I snaked a hand underneath to prop it up, but that tilted the stack too far, and the top box started to slip, and then the whole stack teetered—
   And then I was standing amidst a heap of dented cardboard boxes. One of which busted open, spilling out a mountain of boxer shorts.
   Which was, of course, the perfect moment for the world’s most beautiful girl to poke her head out of the window next door and say hi.
   “So you’re the new neighbor,” the girl said, eyes not on me but on the boxer shorts.
   She was … wow. She had this long brown hair, all thick and wavy like from a shampoo commercial. And these bright blue eyes, the kind that made you want to write poems about the sky and the ocean and all that junk. If I were the kind of guy who wrote poems. Which, obviously, I am not.
   “Nice to meet you,” I said, frantically piling my underwear back into the box.
   “How long was the drive from New York?”
   How did she know I was from New York?
   “I could tell from your pretty hat,” she explained.
   Oh. Right. The hat. The bedazzled, pink and purple, tackiness-hall-of-fame hat. I wanted to evaporate, right on the spot. Actually, I wanted the hat to evaporate. Or spontaneously combust. When that didn’t happen, I whipped it off my head and shoved it into my back pocket. “This was actually a gift from my aunt.”
   The girl had a smile like a cat. “It’s also a gift for me and everyone else who gets to see you wearing it.”
   Play it cool, I reminded myself … like I had ever, in my life, been cool. “Then you are welcome, girl-in-the-window. I’m Zach, by the way.”
   “I’m Hannah.” She looked over her shoulder then, all quick and nervous. “I gotta go.”
   Just like that, she was gone. And in her place? A middle-aged creeper with thick black glasses and a tight-fitting black suit. He looked kind of like a professor … if there were such a thing as a professor of weird.
   “Hi. We’re just moving in,” I said, figuring that was the kind of neighborly thing you said out in the sitcom suburbs.
   The guy just stared at me, no expression whatsoever. It was like his face was made out of wax.
   “Just me and my mom,” I added, then indicated the hat, in case that was throwing him off. “This hat was a gift.”
   Maybe the guy couldn’t talk? Or maybe this was like one of those creepy movies where the weird guy next door is a serial killer?
   Professor Weird raised an arm and pointed. “See that fence?”
   “Uh, yup?” Tough not to see it: black, high, wrought iron, running straight down the border between our houses.
   “Stay on your side of it,” he said. “Stay away from my daughter, stay away from me, and we won’t have any problems.” He slammed the window shut and pulled down the blinds. I could hear him turning what sounded like a lock.
   A big lock.
   And they say New Yorkers aren’t friendly!
   I got the boxes together again and headed back inside. Mom and Aunt Lorraine were already unpacking. I guess we really did live there now. “Just met our neighbor,” I told them. “What a sweet teddy bear.”
   “Mr. Shivers?” Lorraine brightened. “He moved to town a few years ago. Very mysterious, very sexy. I love his scent. It’s like this sensuous, sweaty pine tree.”
   “Not my type,” I told her, shuddering. Aunt Lorraine is great and all, but when she starts talking about sensuous pine trees, I kind of want to stick my finger down my throat and gag for a while.
   My mom ripped off the packing tape on another box and opened it up. She pulled out a wooden plaque that’d been sitting on top, and we all fell silent.
   Mom swallowed. “Oh.”
   It was a big, fancy plaque, with NEW YORK FIRE DEPARTMENT MEMORIAL spelled out in big, fancy letters.
   I hated the sight of it.
   “You okay, sweetheart?” she asked in That Voice, the wobbly one that said: I can keep it to
gether, but only if you can.
   “Yeah, sorry.” I cleared my throat and made my face a total blank. I could hold it together for her, keep her from worrying about me. My dad would have wanted it that way. “I’m gonna go to my room and unpack. Knock it off my bucket list.”
   I got out of there before either of them could say anything that might make one of us cry. I hated crying.
   Plus, I’d done enough of that lately.
   See, here’s the thing about my mom and me. We’re doing a pretty good job of being just the two of us. But we both know that’s not the way it’s supposed to be. It’s supposed to be the three of us. Me, my mom, and my dad.
   Once I was safe in my new room, door shut behind me, I cued up the video on my dad’s old camcorder. The video I’ve watched more times than I would ever admit. There was my dad, all dressed up in uniform, getting a medal from the mayor.
   I was so proud of him that day. I wanted to climb up on the roof and shout it to the whole world: That’s my dad.
   I’d watched the video so many times, I knew the mayor’s speech by heart:
   “We have forgotten what the word hero means. It’s not about throwing the winning pass or being on the cover of a magazine. A true hero is someone who gives of themselves, who sacrifices, who throws themselves in harm’s way to protect others. Lieutenant Neal Cooper is one of those heroes.”
   Sometimes I worried I would never be able to live up to that, never be the kind of hero my dad was.
   Sometimes, though, I wished he hadn’t been quite so eager to throw himself in harm’s way for someone else. Maybe if he hadn’t been such a good hero, he would still be here for us.
   My mom swung the door open, and I quickly shut off the video. There was no reason for her to know how often I watched it. That would just make her worry, and these days, my mom worried enough.
   “You okay, honey?”
   “Just found some old baby pictures,” I told her, trying to sound cheerful. “I really did look like baby King Kong.”
   She bought it. I could tell from how the fake, tense smile on her face turned into a real one.
   That’s when I decided I really would try to make this whole move-to-nowhere thing work. For her. Now that my dad wasn’t around, it was up to me to make some sacrifices of my own.
   

Say Cheese and Die--Again!
Fifth-Grade Zombies
Revenge of the Invisible Boy
The Dummy Meets the Mummy!
Beware, the Snowman
Welcome to Smellville
Camp Daze
Calling All Creeps
Missing
How I Learned to Fly
I Live In Your Basement
Ghost Camp
Chicken Chicken
My Friend Slappy
The New Girl
Diary of a Dummy
Monster Blood is Back
Beware, The Snowman (Goosebumps #51)
Give Yourself Goosebumps: Beware of the Purple Peanut Butter
Drop Dead Gorgeous
Claws!
61 - I Live in Your Basement
Shadow Girl
14 - The Werewolf of Fever Swamp
You Can't Scare Me!
The Sign of Fear
Red Rain
The Horror at Chiller House
Welcome to Dead House
What Holly Heard
Have You Met My Ghoulfriend?
It Came From Ohio!
The Barking Ghost g-32
20 - The Scarecrow Walks at Midnight
25 - Attack of the Mutant
Vampire Breath
Please Do Not Feed the Weirdo
[Goosebumps 12] - Be Careful What You Wish For...
Fear Games
Red Rain: A Novel
Night of the Living Dummy 3
Werewolf Skin
Curse of the Mummy's Tomb
[Goosebumps 37] - The Headless Ghost
Escape from Camp Run-For-Your-Life
Diary of a Mad Mummy
Little Comic Shop of Horrors
My Name Is Evil
The Rottenest Angel
Monster Blood For Breakfast!
[Goosebumps 41] - Bad Hare Day
The Adventures of Shrinkman
House of Whispers
The Taste of Night
Say Cheese and Die!
Wanted
One Day at Horrorland
Scream and Scream Again!
Haunted Mask II
[Goosebumps 03] - Monster Blood
Tick Tock, You're Dead!
Lose, Team, Lose!
Night of the Puppet People
The Boy Who Ate Fear Street
The Birthday Party of No Return!
Toy Terror
[Goosebumps 27] - A Night in Terror Tower
[Goosebumps 39] - How I Got My Shrunken Head
17 - Why I'm Afraid of Bees
[Goosebumps 57] - My Best Friend is Invisible
They Call Me the Night Howler!
House of a Thousand Screams
The Curse of Camp Cold Lake
Mostly Ghostly Freaks and Shrieks
Dangerous Girls
30 - It Came from Beneath the Sink
Killer's Kiss
Attack of the Graveyard Ghouls
62 - Monster Blood IV
Double Date
The Secret Bedroom
[Goosebumps 48] - Attack of the Jack-O'-Lanterns
[Goosebumps 26] - My Hairiest Adventure
50 - Calling All Creeps!
The Hidden Evil
I Am Slappy's Evil Twin
Planet of the Lawn Gnomes
Piano Lessons Can Be Murder
Let's Get Invisible!
Why I Quit Zombie School
Bride of the Living Dummy
03 - Monster Blood
The Attack of the Aqua Apes
[Goosebumps 15] - You Can't Scare Me!
Goosebumps the Movie
The New Girl (Fear Street)
21 - Go Eat Worms!
02 - Stay Out of the Basement
The Second Horror
Scare School
Beware!
Deep Trouble (9780545405768)
13 - Piano Lessons Can Be Murder
54 - Don't Go To Sleep
29 - Monster Blood III
[Goosebumps 29] - Monster Blood III
Return of the Mummy
[Goosebumps 31] - Night of the Living Dummy II
You May Now Kill the Bride
28 - The Cuckoo Clock of Doom
16 - One Day At Horrorland
47 - Legend of the Lost Legend
Phantom of the Auditorium
15 - You Can't Scare Me!
[Goosebumps 49] - Vampire Breath
Three Evil Wishes
Party Poopers
06 - Let's Get Invisible!
Camp Nowhere
Why I'm Afraid of Bees
[Goosebumps 60] - Werewolf Skin
Series 2000- Jekyl & Heidi
Escape from HorrorLand
[Goosebumps 08] - The Girl Who Cried Monster
18 - Monster Blood II
[Goosebumps 28] - The Cuckoo Clock of Doom
A Shocker on Shock Street
06 - Eye of the Fortuneteller
Don't Close Your Eyes!
Three Faces of Me
The Abominable Snowman of Pasadena
[Goosebumps 51] - Beware, the Snowman
The Barking Ghost
The Wizard of Ooze
Nightmare in 3-D
The Girl Who Cried Monster
The Beast 2
48 - Attack of the Jack-O'-Lanterns
49 - Vampire Breath
Creature Teacher: The Final Exam
The Sequel
The Secret
Overnight
57 - My Best Friend is Invisible
Night of the Werecat
Please Don't Feed the Vampire!
The Teacher from Heck
33 - The Horror at Camp Jellyjam
Camp Fear Ghouls
The Five Masks of Dr. Screem
41 - Bad Hare Day
Can You Keep a Secret?
Silent Night 3
23 - Return of the Mummy
The Scarecrow Walks at Midnight
Series 2000- Return to Horroland
07 - Fright Knight
Fear Hall: The Beginning
Help! We Have Strange Powers!
Goosebumps Most Wanted #5: Dr. Maniac Will See You Now
11 - The Haunted Mask
[Goosebumps 47] - Legend of the Lost Legend
46 - How to Kill a Monster
Party Games
A Nightmare on Clown Street
The Horror at Camp Jellyjam
Deep Trouble 2
Moonlight Secrets
[Goosebumps 50] - Calling All Creeps
Dumb Clucks
Judy and the Beast
The Heinie Prize
Full Moon Halloween
[Goosebumps 45] - Ghost Camp
First Evil
[Goosebumps 22] - Ghost Beach
Switched
39 - How I Got My Shrunken Head
Toy Terror: Batteries Included
32 - The Barking Ghost
The Big Blueberry Barf-Off!
The Third Evil
The Blob That Ate Everyone
Return to the Carnival of Horrors
College Weekend
How I Met My Monster (9780545510172)
Heads, You Lose!
Let's Get This Party Haunted!
Attack of the Mutant
Dance of Death
My Friends Call Me Monster
[Goosebumps 13] - Piano Lessons Can Be Murder
Who Killed the Homecoming Queen?
58 - Deep Trouble II
Body Switchers from Outer Space
[Goosebumps 09] - Welcome to Camp Nightmare
The Haunted Car
The Twisted Tale of Tiki Island
The Great Smelling Bee
Secret Admirer
Creep from the Deep
[Goosebumps 25] - Attack of the Mutant
Field of Screams
The Creature from Club Lagoona
[Goosebumps 40] - Night of the Living Dummy III
10 - The Ghost Next Door
[Goosebumps 44] - Say Cheese and Die—Again!
Here Comes the Shaggedy
[Goosebumps 52] - How I Learned to Fly
[Goosebumps 16] - One Day at HorrorLand
Trapped in the Circus of Fear
Series 2000- Are You Terrified Yet?
59 - The Haunted School
[Goosebumps 24] - Phantom of the Auditorium
Series 2000- Horrors of the Black Ring
[Goosebumps 56] - The Curse of Camp Cold Lake
All-Night Party
Thrills and Chills
Zombie Halloween
04 - Say Cheese and Die!
The Second Evil
Night of the Creepy Things
Weirdo Halloween
The Cabinet of Souls
44 - Say Cheese and Die—Again
Liar Liar
[Goosebumps 43] - The Beast from the East
[Goosebumps 18] - Monster Blood II
The Wrong Number
They Call Me Creature
Spell of the Screaming Jokers
[Goosebumps 30] - It Came from Beneath the Sink!
Got Cake?
Cheerleaders: The New Evil
Egg Monsters from Mars
Night of the Living Dummy
Silent Night
The Conclusion
26 - My Hairiest Adventure
Eye Candy
Welcome to Camp Slither
The Howler
Lizard of Oz
Under the Magician's Spell
[Goosebumps 02] - Stay Out of the Basement
The Knight in Screaming Armor
05 - The Curse of the Mummy's Tomb
[Ghosts of Fear Street 06] - Eye of the Fortuneteller
The Beast
The Best Friend
The Third Horror
Punk'd and Skunked
[Goosebumps 19] - Deep Trouble
A Midsummer Night's Scream
Secret Agent Grandma
[Goosebumps 55] - The Blob That Ate Everyone
Why I'm Not Afraid of Ghosts
34 - Revenge of the Lawn Gnomes
Series 2000- Brain Juice
[Goosebumps 05] - The Curse of the Mummy's Tomb
My Best Friend Is Invisible
The Deadly Experiments of Dr. Eeek
19 - Deep Trouble
Bad Moonlight
Who's Your Mummy?
Broken Hearts
The First Horror
Series 2000- The Miummy Walks
Revenge of the Living Dummy
A Night in Terror Tower
12 - Be Careful What You Wish For...
[Goosebumps 53] - Chicken Chicken
The Wrong Girl
Go Eat Worms!
When the Ghost Dog Howls
Escape From Shudder Mansion
The Sitter
The Betrayal
The Ooze
[Goosebumps 20] - The Scarecrow Walks at Midnight
The Stepsister
Wrong Number 2
[Goosebumps 01] - Welcome to Dead House
How I Got My Shrunken Head
Little Camp of Horrors
[Goosebumps 62] - Monster Blood IV
How to Be a Vampire
Attack of the Jack
09 - Welcome to Camp Nightmare
40 - Night of the Living Dummy III
Daughters of Silence
No Survivors
[Goosebumps 34] - Revenge of the Lawn Gnomes
Shake, Rattle, and Hurl!
27 - A Night in Terror Tower
Fear: 13 Stories of Suspense and Horror
36 - The Haunted Mask II
[Ghosts of Fear Street 07] - Fright Knight
07 - Night of the Living Dummy
The Haunting Hour
The Curse of the Creeping Coffin
A Sad Mistake
Night of the Living Dummy 2
Welcome to the Wicked Wax Museum
Midnight Games
The Burning
The Ghost Next Door
[Goosebumps 36] - The Haunted Mask II
The Face
31 - Night of the Living Dummy II
[Goosebumps 42] - Egg Monsters From Mars
Trick or Trap
The Headless Ghost
Beware of the Purple Peanut Butter
The Ghost of Slappy
Don't Go to Sleep
[Goosebumps 38] - The Abominable Snowman of Pasadena
43 - The Beast from the East
51 - Beware, the Snowman
[Goosebumps 33] - The Horror at Camp Jellyjam
The New Year's Party
[Goosebumps 32] - The Barking Ghost
Cuckoo Clock of Doom
High Tide (9781481413824)
Zombie Town
[Goosebumps 21] - Go Eat Worms!
Forbidden Secrets
Night of the Giant Everything
[Goosebumps 07] - Night of the Living Dummy
Give Me a K-I-L-L
Ghouls Gone Wild
Night In Werewolf Woods
The Confession
The Good, the Bad and the Very Slimy
It Came From Beneath The Sink
Legend of the Lost Legend
First Date
The Dead Boyfriend
[Goosebumps 59] - The Haunted School
[Goosebumps 11] - The Haunted Mask
Halloween Party
Locker 13
Streets of Panic Park
Dudes, the School Is Haunted!
01 - Welcome to Dead House
A New Fear
It's Alive! It's Alive!
Don't Stay Up Late
Stay Out of the Basement
The Cheater
The Awakening Evil
Attack of the Jack-O'-Lanterns
What Scares You the Most?
22 - Ghost Beach
Slappy Birthday to You
55 - The Blob That Ate Everyone
45 - Ghost Camp
Ghost Beach
Scream of the Evil Genie
Silent Night 2
Escape from the Carnival of Horrors
60 - Werewolf Skin
Welcome to Camp Nightmare
The Beast from the East
[Goosebumps 61] - I Live in Your Basement
The 12 Screams of Christmas
The Lost Girl
Dear Diary, I'm Dead
Don't Forget Me!
53 - Chicken Chicken
Nightmare Hour
Deep in the Jungle of Doom
Eye Of The Fortuneteller
[Goosebumps 14] - The Werewolf of Fever Swamp
[Goosebumps 46] - How to Kill a Monster
Attack of the Beastly Babysitter
[Goosebumps 35] - A Shocker on Shock Street
[Goosebumps 23] - Return of the Mummy
The Children of Fear
The Dare
Say Cheese - And Die Screaming!
56- The Curse of Camp Cold Lake
Little Shop of Hamsters
Monster Blood IV g-62
Monster Blood
Slappy New Year!
24 - Phantom of the Auditorium
42 - Egg Monsters from Mars
52 - How I Learned to Fly
Temptation
Party Summer
The Scream of the Haunted Mask
[Goosebumps 06] - Let's Get Invisible
[Goosebumps 10] - The Ghost Next Door
Goosebumps Most Wanted - 02 - Son of Slappy
Calling All Birdbrains
Series 2000- Headless Halloween
Dr. Maniac vs. Robby Schwartz
Who Let the Ghosts Out?
Battle of the Dum Diddys
38 - The Abominable Snowman of Pasadena
08 - The Girl Who Cried Monster
Don't Scream!
Visitors
Werewolf of Fever Swamp
[Goosebumps 54] - Don't Go To Sleep
[Goosebumps 58] - Deep Trouble II
Werewolf Skin g-60
37 - The Headless Ghost
Trapped in Bat Wing Hall
Fright Christmas
Bad Dreams
Revenge of the Lawn Gnomes
[Goosebumps 04] - Say Cheese and Die!
[Goosebumps 17] - Why I'm Afraid of Bees
The Curse of Camp Cold Lake g-56