- Home
- R. L. Stine
20 - The Scarecrow Walks at Midnight
20 - The Scarecrow Walks at Midnight Read online
THE SCARECROW
WALKS AT MIDNIGHT
Goosebumps - 20
R.L. Stine
(An Undead Scan v1.5)
1
“Hey, Jodie—wait up!”
I turned and squinted into the bright sunlight. My brother, Mark, was still on the concrete train platform. The train had clattered off. I could see it snaking its way through the low, green meadows in the distance.
I turned to Stanley. Stanley is the hired man on my grandparents’ farm. He stood beside me, carrying both suitcases. “Look in the dictionary for the word ‘slowpoke’,” I said, “and you’ll see Mark’s picture.”
Stanley smiled at me. “I like the dictionary, Jodie,” he said. “Sometimes I read it for hours.”
“Hey, Mark—get a move on!” I cried. But he was taking his good time, walking slowly, in a daze as usual.
I tossed my blond hair behind my shoulders and turned back to Stanley. Mark and I hadn’t visited the farm for a year. But Stanley still looked the same.
He’s so skinny. “Like a noodle”, my grandma always says. His denim overalls always look five sizes too big on him.
Stanley is about forty or forty-five, I think. He wears his dark hair in a crewcut, shaved close to his head. His ears are huge. They stick way out and are always bright red. And he has big, round, brown eyes that remind me of puppy eyes.
Stanley isn’t very smart. Grandpa Kurt always says that Stanley isn’t working with a full one hundred watts.
But Mark and I really like him. He has a quiet sense of humor. And he is kind and gentle and friendly, and always has lots of amazing things to show us whenever we visit the farm.
“You look nice, Jodie,” Stanley said, his cheeks turning as red as his ears. “How old are you now?”
“Twelve,” I told him. “And Mark is eleven.”
He thought about it. “That makes twenty-three,” he joked.
We both laughed. You never know what Stanley is going to say!
“I think I stepped in something gross,” Mark complained, catching up to us.
I always know what Mark is going to say. My brother only knows three words—cool, weird, and gross. Really. That’s his whole vocabulary.
As a joke, I gave him a dictionary for his last birthday. “You’re weird,” Mark said when I handed it to him. “What a gross gift.”
He scraped his white high-tops on the ground as we followed Stanley to the beat-up, red pickup truck. “Carry my backpack for me,” Mark said, trying to shove the bulging backpack at me.
“No way,” I told him. “Carry it yourself.”
The backpack contained his Walkman, about thirty tapes, comic books, his Game Boy, and at least fifty game cartridges. I knew he planned to spend the whole month lying on the hammock on the screened-in back porch of the farmhouse, listening to music and playing video games.
Well… no way!
Mom and Dad said it was my job to make sure Mark got outside and enjoyed the farm. We were so cooped up in the city all year. That’s why they sent us to visit Grandpa Kurt and Grandma Miriam for a month each summer—to enjoy the great outdoors.
We stopped beside the truck while Stanley searched his overall pockets for the key. “It’s going to get pretty hot today,” Stanley said, “unless it cools down.”
A typical Stanley weather report.
I gazed out at the wide, grassy field beyond the small train station parking lot. Thousands of tiny white puffballs floated up against the clear blue sky.
It was so beautiful!
Naturally, I sneezed.
I love visiting my grandparents’ farm. My only problem is, I’m allergic to just about everything on it.
So Mom packs several bottles of my allergy medicine for me—and lots of tissues.
“Gesundheit,” Stanley said. He tossed our two suitcases in the back of the pickup. Mark slid his backpack in, too. “Can I ride in back?” he asked.
He loves to lie flat in the back, staring up at the sky, and bumping up and down really hard.
Stanley is a terrible driver. He can’t seem to concentrate on steering and driving at the right speed at the same time. So there are always lots of quick turns and heavy bumps.
Mark lifted himself into the back of the pickup and stretched out next to the suitcases. I climbed beside Stanley in the front.
A short while later, we were bouncing along the narrow, twisting road that led to the farm. I stared out the dusty window at the passing meadows and farmhouses. Everything looked so green and alive.
Stanley drove with both hands wrapped tightly around the top of the steering wheel. He sat forward stiffly, leaning over the wheel, staring straight ahead through the windshield without blinking.
“Mr. Mortimer doesn’t farm his place anymore,” he said, lifting one hand from the wheel to point to a big, white farmhouse on top of a sloping, green hill.
“Why not?” I asked.
“Because he died,” Stanley replied solemnly.
See what I mean? You never know what Stanley is going to say.
We bounced over a deep rut in the road. I was sure Mark was having a great time in back.
The road leads through the small town, so small that it doesn’t even have a name. The farmers have always called it Town.
It has a feed store, a combination gas station and grocery store, a white-steepled church, a hardware store, and a mailbox.
There were two trucks parked in front of the feed store. I didn’t see anyone as we barreled past.
My grandparents’ farm is about two miles from town. I recognized the cornfields as we approached.
“The corn is so high already!” I exclaimed, staring through the bouncing window. “Have you eaten any yet?”
“Just at dinner,” Stanley replied.
Suddenly, he slowed the truck and turned his eyes to me. “The scarecrow walks at midnight,” he uttered in a low voice.
“Huh?” I wasn’t sure I’d heard correctly.
“The scarecrow walks at midnight,” he repeated, training his big puppy eyes on me. “I read it in the book.”
I didn’t know what to say, so I laughed. I thought maybe he was making a joke.
Days later, I realized it was no joke.
2
Watching the farm spread out in front of us filled me with happiness. It’s not a big farm or a fancy farm, but I like everything about it.
I like the barn with its sweet smells. I like the low mooing sounds of the cows way off in the far pasture. I like to watch the tall stalks of corn, all swaying together in the wind.
Corny, huh?
I also like the scary ghost stories Grandpa Kurt tells us at night in front of the fireplace.
And I have to include Grandma Miriam’s chocolate chip pancakes. They’re so good, I sometimes dream about them back home in the city.
I also like the happy expressions on my grandparents’ faces when we come rushing up to greet them.
Of course I was the first one out of the truck. Mark was as slow as usual. I went running up to the screen porch in back of their big, old farmhouse. I couldn’t wait to see my grandparents.
Grandma Miriam came waddling out, her arms outstretched. The screen door slammed behind her. But then I saw Grandpa Kurt push it open and he hurried out, too.
His limp was worse, I noticed right away. He leaned heavily on a white cane. He’d never needed one before.
I didn’t have time to think about it as Mark and I were smothered in hugs. “So good to see you! It’s been so long, so long!” Grandma Miriam cried happily.
There were the usual comments about how much taller we were and how grown up we looked.
“Jodie, where
’d you get that blond hair? There aren’t any blonds in my family,” Grandpa Kurt would say, shaking his mane of white hair. “You must get that from your father’s side.
“No, I know. I bet you got it from a store,” he said, grinning. It was his little joke. He greeted me with it every summer. And his blue eyes would sparkle excitedly.
“You’re right. It’s a wig,” I told him, laughing.
He gave my long blond hair a playful tug.
“Did you get cable yet?” Mark asked, dragging his backpack along the ground.
“Cable TV?” Grandpa Kurt stared hard at Mark. “Not yet. But we still get three channels. How many more do we need?”
Mark rolled his eyes. “No MTV,” he groaned.
Stanley made his way past us, carrying our suitcases into the house.
“Let’s go in. I’ll bet you’re starving,” Grandma Miriam said. “I made soup and sandwiches. We’ll have chicken and corn tonight. The corn is very sweet this year. I know how you two love it.”
I watched my grandparents as they led the way to the house. They both looked older to me. They moved more slowly than I remembered. Grandpa Kurt’s limp was definitely worse. They both seemed tired.
Grandma Miriam is short and chubby. She has a round face surrounded by curly red hair. Bright red. There’s no way to describe the color. I don’t know what she uses to dye it that color. I’ve never seen it on anyone else!
She wears square-shaped eyeglasses that give her a really old-fashioned look. She likes big, roomy housedresses. I don’t think I’ve ever seen her in jeans or pants.
Grandpa Kurt is tall and broad-shouldered. Mom says he was really handsome when he was young. “Like a movie star,” she always tells me.
Now he has wavy, white hair, still very thick, that he wets and slicks down flat on his head. He has sparkling blue eyes that always make me smile. And a white stubble over his slender face. Grandpa Kurt doesn’t like to shave.
Today he was wearing a long-sleeved, red-and-green-plaid shirt, buttoned to the collar despite the hot day, and baggy jeans, stained at one knee, held up by white suspenders.
Lunch was fun. We sat around the long kitchen table. Sunlight poured in through the big window. I could see the barn in back and the cornfields stretching behind it.
Mark and I told all our news—about school, about my basketball team going to the championships, about our new car, about Dad growing a mustache.
For some reason, Stanley thought that was very funny. He was laughing so hard, he choked on his split-pea soup. And Grandpa Kurt had to reach over and slap him on the back.
It’s hard to know what will crack Stanley up. As Mark would say, Stanley is definitely weird.
All through lunch, I kept staring at my grandparents. I couldn’t get over how much they had changed in one year. They seemed so much quieter, so much slower.
That’s what it means to get older, I told myself.
“Stanley will have to show you his scarecrows,” Grandma Miriam said, passing the bowl of potato chips. “Won’t you, Stanley?”
Grandpa Kurt cleared his throat loudly. I had the feeling he was telling Grandma Miriam to change the subject or something.
“I made them,” Stanley said, grinning proudly. He turned his big eyes on me. “The book—it told me how.”
“Are you still taking guitar lessons?” Grandpa Kurt asked Mark.
I could see that, for some reason, Grandpa Kurt didn’t want to talk about Stanley’s scarecrows.
“Yeah,” Mark answered with a mouthful of potato chips. “But I sold my acoustic. I switched to electric.”
“You mean you have to plug it in?” Stanley asked. He started to giggle, as if he had just cracked a funny joke.
“What a shame you didn’t bring your guitar,” Grandma Miriam said to Mark.
“No, it isn’t,” I teased. “The cows would start giving sour milk!”
“Shut up, Jodie!” Mark snapped. He has no sense of humor.
“They already do give sour milk,” Grandpa Kurt muttered, lowering his eyes.
“Bad luck. When cows give sour milk, it means bad luck,” Stanley declared, his eyes widening, his expression suddenly fearful.
“It’s okay, Stanley,” Grandma Miriam assured him quickly, placing a hand gently on his shoulder. “Grandpa Kurt was only teasing.”
“If you kids are finished, why not go with Stanley,” Grandpa Kurt said. “He’ll give you a tour of the farm. You always enjoy that.” He sighed. “I’d go along, but my leg—it’s been acting up again.”
Grandma Miriam started to clear the dishes. Mark and I followed Stanley out the back door. The grass in the back yard had recently been mowed. The air was heavy with its sweet smell.
I saw a hummingbird fluttering over the flower garden beside the house. I pointed it out to Mark, but by the time he turned, it had hummed away.
At the back of the long, green yard stood the old barn. Its white walls were badly stained and peeling. It really needed a paint job. The doors were open, and I could see square bales of straw inside.
Far to the right of the barn, almost to the cornfields, stood the small guest house where Stanley lived with his teenage son, Sticks.
“Stanley—where’s Sticks?” I asked. “Why wasn’t he at lunch?”
“Went to town,” Stanley answered quietly. “Went to town, riding on a pony.”
Mark and I exchanged glances. We never can figure Stanley out.
Poking up from the cornfield stood several dark figures, the scarecrows Grandma Miriam had started to talk about. I stared out at them, shielding my eyes from the sun with one hand.
“So many scarecrows!” I exclaimed. “Stanley, last summer there was only one. Why are there so many now?”
He didn’t reply. He didn’t seem to hear me. He had a black baseball cap pulled down low over his forehead. He was taking long strides, leaning forward with that storklike walk of his, his hands shoved into the pockets of his baggy denim overalls.
“We’ve seen the farm a hundred times,” Mark complained, whispering to me. “Why do we have to take the grand tour again?”
“Mark—cool your jets,” I told him. “We always take a tour of the farm. It’s a tradition.”
Mark grumbled to himself. He really is lazy. He never wants to do anything.
Stanley led the way past the barn into the cornfields. The stalks were way over my head. Their golden tassels gleamed in the bright sunlight.
Stanley reached up and pulled an ear off the stalk. “Let’s see if it’s ready,” he said, grinning at Mark and me.
He held the ear in his left hand and started to shuck it with his right.
After a few seconds, he pulled the husk away, revealing the ear of corn inside.
I stared at it—and let out a horrified cry.
3
“Ohhhh—it’s disgusting!” I shrieked.
“Gross!” I heard Mark groan.
The corn was a disgusting brown color. And it was moving on the cob. Wriggling. Squirming.
Stanley raised the corn to his face to examine it. And I realized it was covered with worms. Hundreds of wriggling, brown worms.
“No!” Stanley cried in horror. He let the ear of corn drop to the ground at his feet. “That’s bad luck! The book says so. That’s very bad luck!”
I stared down at the ear of corn. The worms were wriggling off the cob, onto the dirt.
“It’s okay, Stanley,” I told him. “I only screamed because I was surprised. This happens sometimes. Sometimes worms get into the corn. Grandpa told me.”
“No. It’s bad,” Stanley insisted in a trembling voice. His red ears were aflame. His big eyes revealed his fear. “The book—it says so.”
“What book?” Mark demanded. He kicked the wormy ear of corn away with the toe of his high-top.
“My book,” Stanley replied mysteriously. “My superstition book.”
Uh-oh, I thought. Stanley shouldn’t have a book about superstitions. He was already t
he most superstitious person in the world—even without a book!
“You’ve been reading a book about superstitions?” Mark asked him, watching the brown worms crawl over the soft dirt.
“Yes.” Stanley nodded his head enthusiastically. “It’s a good book. It tells me everything. And it’s all true. All of it!”
He pulled off his cap and scratched his stubby hair. “I’ve got to check the book. I’ve got to see what to do about the corn. The bad corn.”
He was getting pretty worked up. It was making me feel a little scared. I’ve known Stanley my whole life. I think he’s worked for Grandpa Kurt for more than twenty years.
He’s always been strange. But I’ve never seen him get so upset about something as unimportant as a bad ear of corn.
“Show us the scarecrows,” I said, trying to get his mind off the corn.
“Yeah. Let’s see them,” Mark joined in.
“Okay. The scarecrows.” Stanley nodded. Then he turned, still thinking hard, and began leading the way through the tall rows of cornstalks.
The stalks creaked and groaned as we passed by them. It was kind of an eerie sound.
Suddenly, a shadow fell over me. One of the dark scarecrows rose up in front of us. It wore a tattered black coat, stuffed with straw. Its arms stretched stiffly out at its sides.
The scarecrow was tall, towering over my head. Tall enough to stand over the high cornstalks.
Its head was a faded burlap bag, filled with straw. Evil black eyes and a menacing frown had been painted on thickly in black paint. A battered old-fashioned hat rested on its head.
“You made these?” I asked Stanley. I could see several other scarecrows poking up from the corn. They all stood in the same stiff position. They all had the same menacing frown.
He stared up the scarecrow’s face. “I made them,” he said in a low voice. “The book showed me how.”
“They’re pretty scary looking,” Mark said, standing close beside me. He grabbed the scarecrow’s straw hand and shook it. “What’s up?” Mark asked it.
“The scarecrow walks at midnight,” Stanley said, repeating the phrase he had used at the train station.

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