#point horror
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thevillain-s · 1 month ago
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thatretro · 20 days ago
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It's getting colder, so it's time to take another trip into Stine's Point offerings. Is this book a stone cold hit, or a case of the cold shoulder?
New Point by Numbers: The Snowman
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paperbackpurgatory · 7 months ago
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Eve Bunting's The Ghosts Of Departure Point (1982)
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pink-evilette · 1 year ago
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discoinpalmsprings · 2 years ago
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danielstalter · 1 year ago
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The Babysitter
The Babysitter remains one of R.L. Stine’s most notorious books outside of his Goosebumps and Fear Street titles, and rightly so. Jenny was a relatable and endearing protagonist. Stine did an excellent job with the pacing, slowly building the tension with some genuinely unnerving scenes. On the downside, I had some problems with the motives of the villain and there was some really shoddy police work that was presented as exceptional. I was also baffled by one particular action of Jenny’s mother, which I’ll save for the full review below because of spoilers. I’ll just say that sometimes it’s hard to distinguish between bad/oblivious parenting and things that were still considered OK in the late 1980s. Overall, I really enjoyed this one in spite of its flaws.
Score: 3.5 Full Review: https://www.danstalter.com/the-babysitter/
The Babysitter II
The Babysitter II was a very middle-of-the-road sequel. The characters were solid and by far the strongest part overall. But for every element I liked, there was something of equal measure that I didn’t. The book had some very dated depictions of mental health, which were hard to look past. I hated Jenny’s psychiatrist from the jump. It was immediately apparent he was a bad fit for a traumatized teenage girl. I suppose he sucked in a believable way, but I can’t help but cringe at unhelpful depictions of therapy. It’s OK to break up with your therapist, folks. Jenny certainly needed to. The dream sequences also got really tiring after the first one. Unless the book is about dreams specifically, they just feel cheap. The kid that Jenny babysits for in this round was presented as a menace to society. Eli Wexner is a child genius, he has mood swings, he likes tarantulas, and he can be straight-up weird. I think he read more as an autistic kid with inexperienced and overwhelmed parents than anything threatening. I don’t know if that’s what Stine was going for, but that’s definitely what I got as the story progressed. The other reason I’m being hard on this one is that I guessed the plot twist way earlier than I usually do. I suppose the book holds up as a competent mystery if you aren’t familiar with any other books R.L. Stine has written. For me, it felt like a partial rehashing of the first book and a mix of things I’ve seen repeatedly in the Fear Street books. The Babysitter II wasn’t the worst, and it wasn’t the best. It’s a mostly competent sequel that just didn’t bring anything particularly new to the table.
Score: 2.5 Full Review: https://www.danstalter.com/the-babysitter-ii/
The Babysitter III
The Babysitter III felt like a sequel in search of a story. I’ll start with the good; at least Jenny wasn’t taking on yet another babysitting job after her experiences in the first two books. It changed the formula by introducing Jenny’s cousin Debra as this book’s titular babysitter. Unfortunately, I still saw the twist ending coming from a mile away. It had too many similarities to other Stine books. Everything he did here, he’s done it before and he’s done it better. There were a bunch of B-plot elements that ultimately served no purpose other than to throw the reader off the real trail. The B-plots are great for this function, but they work best when they also tie back into the main storyline. Almost none of them did. Jenny is also very clearly dealing with PTSD, but no longer appears to be in therapy or have any sort of support system in place. I’m used to dated and problematic depictions of mental health in these books, but this one just felt hard to watch. It was like one long, sad cringe. The book also relied on some characterization changes that I just couldn’t buy into. It made me wish the whole Babysitter series featured a different protagonist in each installment. Because the first Babysitter book was great; I consider it one of Stine’s best. The Babysitter II was less so but not bad. This one just felt phoned in. The ending of The Babysitter III does hold some promise for the fourth and final installment, but I can’t say I have a ton of confidence in that happening.
Score: 1 Full Review: https://www.danstalter.com/the-babysitter-iii/
The Babysitter IV
I did not go into this book with high expectations, so I was very pleasantly surprised when this book took a fresh direction. The Babysitter III had squeezed every last bit out of using Mr. Hagan as a villain, so I was happy to see that he was barely mentioned all in The Babysitter IV. In a lot of ways, this book was about Jenny reclaiming the narrative for herself. The way that Jenny’s past experiences caused her to question her own sanity at every turn made for a unique perspective that a lot of sequels miss out on. I figured out some of the twist ending early on, but I wasn’t bothered by it. What did bother me was how rushed the ending was. There was a whole other story received in the last few pages that deserved its own spotlight. It was a shame because I really liked the story it was telling, I just wanted more than an eleventh-hour info dump. I can’t be more specific without dropping massive spoilers, but almost all of the issues I had with this book stem from how it ended. I still liked The Babysitter IV more than I didn’t, and I was happy to see the final installment in the series end on such a strong note.
Score: 3.5 Full Review: https://www.danstalter.com/the-babysitter-iv/
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amyandleoco · 2 years ago
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Welcome to my world
An A4 printable quote from The Forbidden Game book series (Point Horror) by L.J. Smith
Available exclusively from amyandleoco on Etsy
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clairesknee1970 · 2 years ago
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Point Horror covers for The Forbidden Game series by L.J Smith
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totallyhussein-blog · 9 days ago
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Dare to scare? Enter the world of Point Horror
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Back in the 1990's all the kids were reading these for pleasure! So, who remembers Point Horror and which author was your go-to?
Not only did they get thousands of young people visiting bookshops and libraries but they influenced wider youth culture too.
Popular TV shows like Are You Afraid of the Dark? Goosebumps and even hit films like the Scream franchise all have strong PH vibes to them.
These books are still available to buy on Amazon and have inspired book clubs like Tales From Point Horror, who hold regular live sessions on Instagram.
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trekkerac · 14 days ago
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i'm not like other guys i take an angsty au and make it a comedy
Ford: I've managed to record substantial evidence on tape, such as floating objects, footsteps that are not my own, and radio weirdness; The host or singer will slip in observations of my being that I simply cannot chalk up to coincidence. Whether this being is a ghost, or one of Bills tricks I've yet to discover… There are more dubious encounters such as the whispers, spine shivering chills, and of the brief shadowy figures I see down dark hallways. (Proof of an apparition? or simply a hallucination dreamt up by my sleep deprived mind?) I fear my mind is slipping further and further-
Ford: What is that blasted noise?! Stan: Cartoons got ghosts shockingly realistic! Ford: Reminds me of... being annoyed.
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tyanis · 1 year ago
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Kinda feel like there's some untapped meme/reaction image potential from old horror movie trailers...
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wolfythewitch · 6 months ago
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not entirely happy with it haha, didn't have enough time to polish the concept but wahoo jarchivist moment
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thatretro · 6 months ago
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Let's start at the very beginning. It's the first Point Horror and the first major Stine thriller. Does it mean a good first start?
New Point By Numbers: Blind Date
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paperbackpurgatory · 5 months ago
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J.B. Stamper's Tales For The Midnight Hour (1977)
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Stories Of Horror
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pink-evilette · 1 year ago
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spongey445 · 6 months ago
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Point Horror-Beach House
Hello, Spongey here. It’s finally time to return to the world of Point Horror. When it comes to Stine’s contributions to literature, Point has proven to be quite the mixed bag. The Baby-Sitter was a standard but at least solid story while Twisted was forgettable and the Halloween Night duo was…well, bad. It feels like his lesser tendencies get brought out by these. I don’t know what the deal…
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