Goosebumps - Kiwi Beware, Your In For Some Autism

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skykiii

kiwifarms.net
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17 de Jun, 2018
So, does anyone know where I can find scans of the classic books?

And I mean exact scans--the covers, the pages, everything.

I wanted to re-read some of these for nostalgia, and I did find some e-texts.... in text format. And thing is without a lot of the visual trappings these books feel like they lose their charm. But buying physical copies has become stupid with the nostalgia collector's market.

And don't even suggest the re-releases, which not only change the covers but also edit the actual text in some cases.

So yeah... scans like what I'm looking for?
 
Found something on internet archive.
Some of those at least have the covers, so they're a step in the right direction, but I was looking for actual page by page scans, which you can tell none of those are.

An easy tell is the chapter numberings--in the actual books the numbers will be drawn as if they're all gooey and dripping.
 
I'll try different, search engines but Google not bring much not shocking, I'll try edge and firefox and maybe gets some results.

I get what you mean though, the fonts of the chapter helps with the creepy feel and reading the pdf with layout and font like that sucks the fun out of it.
 
Sidenote theres a stupid clickbait article linking to an imgur saying there's "HI-RES" versions of the original covers, looking through it some of them still have the ads on like "free trading cards" or "watch goosebumps on Fox tv". I was hoping for just the cover art to there but getting that left me felling kind of jipped.
 
The only other thing I can think is you're imitating that one bit of the TV Show's theme song.

Speaking of the TV show I recently had a Mandela Effect about that. Basically because looking at an episode list confuses my mental timeline. Because The Blob that Ate Everyone is a season two episode, but I recall that specific book also being around the point where I was no longer into Goosebumps (my exact memory is that my parents bought me a copy at a time where I had moved on to reading Sherlock Holmes and other "real" books).

But this was also the season that had a TV-original "monster blood on an airplane" story, and I recall seeing that at a time when I was still pretty much a fan.

My brain is having a hard time reconciling that these episodes could've aired in the same year.
 
Save your Goosebumps books! It's become the next victim of the "sensitivity edits". (Archive)

Goosebumps is the latest franchise to undergo changes for sensitivity ahead of reprinting. According to The Sunday Times (via Deadline), author R.L. Stine has edited more than a dozen of his Goosebumps books to change references to mental health, weight, or ethnicity. According to the report, the novels have undergone more than 100 edits. Those edits include references to a character being "cheerful" rather than "plump", changing "crazy" to "silly", and completely removing references to villains making victims "slaves.

The report also lists some examples from specific titles. Notably, the reissue of 1998's Bride of the Living Dummy changes the ventriloquist dummy from knocking a girl unconscious using a "love tap" to a magic spell instead while the 1996 book Attack of the Jack-O'-Lanterns changes the description of one character, Lee, from being like "the rappers on MTV videos" to "tall and good-looking, with brown skin, dark brown eyes and a great, warm smile. He sort of struts when he walks and acts real cool."

Goosebumps is just the latest series to get sensitivity revisions. Earlier this month, it was announced that several of the books in the James Bond library will be edited to remove racist content for upcoming reprints and will also include a disclaimer noting that "This book was written at a time when terms and attitudes which might be considered offensive by modern readers were commonplace. A number of updates have been made in this edition, while keeping as close as possible to the original text and the period in which it is set."

In the U.K. Roald Dahl's works also are being republished with changes to characters' physical appearances, omissions to the text, or the inclusion of entirely new lines not written by Dahl so that the books can, as the publisher noted, "continue to be enjoyed by all today." The primary difference between the Dahl and Bond edits is that Stine is the original author of the Goosebumps books and is doing the edits himself.

Goosebumps is a series of children's horror fiction that first debuted in 1992 with the novel, Welcome to Dead House. Since then, the series has sold more than 400 million books worldwide and is the second best-selling book series in history after J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter. The series has spawned various spin-off series, a television series, and even feature films.

What do you think about Stine editing the Goosebumps series? Let us know your thoughts in the comment section.
 
Save your Goosebumps books! It's become the next victim of the "sensitivity edits". (Archive)

Goosebumps is the latest franchise to undergo changes for sensitivity ahead of reprinting. According to The Sunday Times (via Deadline), author R.L. Stine has edited more than a dozen of his Goosebumps books to change references to mental health, weight, or ethnicity. According to the report, the novels have undergone more than 100 edits. Those edits include references to a character being "cheerful" rather than "plump", changing "crazy" to "silly", and completely removing references to villains making victims "slaves.

The report also lists some examples from specific titles. Notably, the reissue of 1998's Bride of the Living Dummy changes the ventriloquist dummy from knocking a girl unconscious using a "love tap" to a magic spell instead while the 1996 book Attack of the Jack-O'-Lanterns changes the description of one character, Lee, from being like "the rappers on MTV videos" to "tall and good-looking, with brown skin, dark brown eyes and a great, warm smile. He sort of struts when he walks and acts real cool."

Goosebumps is just the latest series to get sensitivity revisions. Earlier this month, it was announced that several of the books in the James Bond library will be edited to remove racist content for upcoming reprints and will also include a disclaimer noting that "This book was written at a time when terms and attitudes which might be considered offensive by modern readers were commonplace. A number of updates have been made in this edition, while keeping as close as possible to the original text and the period in which it is set."

In the U.K. Roald Dahl's works also are being republished with changes to characters' physical appearances, omissions to the text, or the inclusion of entirely new lines not written by Dahl so that the books can, as the publisher noted, "continue to be enjoyed by all today." The primary difference between the Dahl and Bond edits is that Stine is the original author of the Goosebumps books and is doing the edits himself.

Goosebumps is a series of children's horror fiction that first debuted in 1992 with the novel, Welcome to Dead House. Since then, the series has sold more than 400 million books worldwide and is the second best-selling book series in history after J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter. The series has spawned various spin-off series, a television series, and even feature films.

What do you think about Stine editing the Goosebumps series? Let us know your thoughts in the comment section.
I mean, even without this there's reasons to find and preserve the original printings, but this just makes me want to even more.

God damn I wish I still had my collection from when I was a kid. Lesson learned: NEVER PART WITH ANYTHING.
 
I'm a big fan of Blogger Beware, it's a shame it's only available on Wayback.

Someone is actually preserving it on a fanwiki, with notes to explain all the references.

Ah, yeah, turns out it was in my page history:


Hey can you tell what entry I read last?
 
Save your Goosebumps books! It's become the next victim of the "sensitivity edits". (Archive)

Goosebumps is the latest franchise to undergo changes for sensitivity ahead of reprinting. According to The Sunday Times (via Deadline), author R.L. Stine has edited more than a dozen of his Goosebumps books to change references to mental health, weight, or ethnicity. According to the report, the novels have undergone more than 100 edits. Those edits include references to a character being "cheerful" rather than "plump", changing "crazy" to "silly", and completely removing references to villains making victims "slaves.

The report also lists some examples from specific titles. Notably, the reissue of 1998's Bride of the Living Dummy changes the ventriloquist dummy from knocking a girl unconscious using a "love tap" to a magic spell instead while the 1996 book Attack of the Jack-O'-Lanterns changes the description of one character, Lee, from being like "the rappers on MTV videos" to "tall and good-looking, with brown skin, dark brown eyes and a great, warm smile. He sort of struts when he walks and acts real cool."

Goosebumps is just the latest series to get sensitivity revisions. Earlier this month, it was announced that several of the books in the James Bond library will be edited to remove racist content for upcoming reprints and will also include a disclaimer noting that "This book was written at a time when terms and attitudes which might be considered offensive by modern readers were commonplace. A number of updates have been made in this edition, while keeping as close as possible to the original text and the period in which it is set."

In the U.K. Roald Dahl's works also are being republished with changes to characters' physical appearances, omissions to the text, or the inclusion of entirely new lines not written by Dahl so that the books can, as the publisher noted, "continue to be enjoyed by all today." The primary difference between the Dahl and Bond edits is that Stine is the original author of the Goosebumps books and is doing the edits himself.

Goosebumps is a series of children's horror fiction that first debuted in 1992 with the novel, Welcome to Dead House. Since then, the series has sold more than 400 million books worldwide and is the second best-selling book series in history after J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter. The series has spawned various spin-off series, a television series, and even feature films.

What do you think about Stine editing the Goosebumps series? Let us know your thoughts in the comment section.
Despite the article's claims Stine himself was proclaiming this shit isn't happening or he is not to blame if it is.
Screenshot_20230306-235155_Brave.jpg
https://archive.is/zKJNi

Apparently the edits were made in 2018 following an ebook release and I'm unsure if Stine had anything to do with that.

Here's the specific excuse made for these changes by Scholastic, the publisher.
“Scholastic takes its responsibility seriously to continue bringing this classic adolescent brand to each new generation. When re-issuing titles several years ago, Scholastic reviewed the text to keep the language current and avoid imagery that could negatively impact a young person’s view of themselves today, with a particular focus on mental health.”

Notice they never say Stine saw this happen and Stine says he knows nothing about this though again he's nearly 80 so who knows how reliable of a narrator he is today. But personally I'm thinking he's telling the truth here.

(Article archive)
 
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