Rating: Summary: good Review: 'Stay Out of the Basement' was a good book to read. The kids are curious when their dad starts eating plant food and staying down in the basement all the time. The
daughter is especially nervous when she sees her dad with
green blood coming out of his hand! Read the book to find
out the details.
Rating: Summary: good Review: 'Stay Out of the Basement' was a good book to read. The kids are curious when their dad starts eating plant food and staying down in the basement all the time. The daughter is especially nervous when she sees her dad with green blood coming out of his hand! Read the book to find out the details.
Rating: Summary: I Will Never Look at Plants the Same Way Again! Review: Although not as sharp as his first outing in the immensely popular "Goosebumps" series, "Stay Out of the Basement" is still quite the page-turner. R.L. Stine has the ability to grab his readers' attentions almost immediately, and that is one reason why his books are so adored by millions of kids everywhere.This was one of the many "Goosebumps" books I got for Christmas in sixth or seventh grade. I had changed from "I'll never read those stupid books" to "I want them all!" I hadn't had most books for more than a couple of hours before they were already read. That's how hooked I was. "Stay Out of the Basement" starts off with Margaret and Casey playing Frisbee. Their father, Dr. Brewer, is a scientist who always has to wear a baseball cap on his head; he does this because, as we later find out, one of his experiments go awry and the side-effects include having leaves growing out of his head instead of hair. Things are going fine for Margaret and Casey until they start noticing things. Things like their father's insistent warnings to never go down into the basement; things like millions of bugs squirming around in his bed; things like their father scarfing down plant food and trying to make them eat it, too! As if having leaves sprouting up from under his cap wasn't weird enough!! The climax works well in this book. It all comes down to the classic "Who do you trust?" saga. Towards the end, we discover that there are two Dr. Brewers; one is a real person, and one is a human-sized plant-like clone. Margaret has to decide who is lying and who is telling the truth when each Dr. Brewer claims to be her and Casey's father. I remember back when I first read it and not knowing who it was going to be. R.L. Stine had done such a wonderful job in writing the book that I didn't know who to trust, either. In case you're a viewer who's never read the book, I won't spoil the ending for you. It's classic R.L. Stine, as everyone who has read his series will identify with. This is one "Goosebumps" book that will give you what it says.
Rating: Summary: "STAY OUT OF THE BASMENT" Review: Although not as sharp as his first outing in the immensely popular "Goosebumps" series, "Stay Out of the Basement" is still quite the page-turner. R.L. Stine has the ability to grab his readers' attentions almost immediately, and that is one reason why his books are so adored by millions of kids everywhere. This was one of the many "Goosebumps" books I got for Christmas in sixth or seventh grade. I had changed from "I'll never read those stupid books" to "I want them all!" I hadn't had most books for more than a couple of hours before they were already read. That's how hooked I was. "Stay Out of the Basement" starts off with Margaret and Casey playing Frisbee. Their father, Dr. Brewer, is a scientist who always has to wear a baseball cap on his head; he does this because, as we later find out, one of his experiments go awry and the side-effects include having leaves growing out of his head instead of hair. Things are going fine for Margaret and Casey until they start noticing things. Things like their father's insistent warnings to never go down into the basement; things like millions of bugs squirming around in his bed; things like their father scarfing down plant food and trying to make them eat it, too! As if having leaves sprouting up from under his cap wasn't weird enough!! The climax works well in this book. It all comes down to the classic "Who do you trust?" saga. Towards the end, we discover that there are two Dr. Brewers; one is a real person, and one is a human-sized plant-like clone. Margaret has to decide who is lying and who is telling the truth when each Dr. Brewer claims to be her and Casey's father. I remember back when I first read it and not knowing who it was going to be. R.L. Stine had done such a wonderful job in writing the book that I didn't know who to trust, either. In case you're a viewer who's never read the book, I won't spoil the ending for you. It's classic R.L. Stine, as everyone who has read his series will identify with. This is one "Goosebumps" book that will give you what it says.
Rating: Summary: I Will Never Look at Plants the Same Way Again! Review: Although not as sharp as his first outing in the immensely popular "Goosebumps" series, "Stay Out of the Basement" is still quite the page-turner. R.L. Stine has the ability to grab his readers' attentions almost immediately, and that is one reason why his books are so adored by millions of kids everywhere. This was one of the many "Goosebumps" books I got for Christmas in sixth or seventh grade. I had changed from "I'll never read those stupid books" to "I want them all!" I hadn't had most books for more than a couple of hours before they were already read. That's how hooked I was. "Stay Out of the Basement" starts off with Margaret and Casey playing Frisbee. Their father, Dr. Brewer, is a scientist who always has to wear a baseball cap on his head; he does this because, as we later find out, one of his experiments go awry and the side-effects include having leaves growing out of his head instead of hair. Things are going fine for Margaret and Casey until they start noticing things. Things like their father's insistent warnings to never go down into the basement; things like millions of bugs squirming around in his bed; things like their father scarfing down plant food and trying to make them eat it, too! As if having leaves sprouting up from under his cap wasn't weird enough!! The climax works well in this book. It all comes down to the classic "Who do you trust?" saga. Towards the end, we discover that there are two Dr. Brewers; one is a real person, and one is a human-sized plant-like clone. Margaret has to decide who is lying and who is telling the truth when each Dr. Brewer claims to be her and Casey's father. I remember back when I first read it and not knowing who it was going to be. R.L. Stine had done such a wonderful job in writing the book that I didn't know who to trust, either. In case you're a viewer who's never read the book, I won't spoil the ending for you. It's classic R.L. Stine, as everyone who has read his series will identify with. This is one "Goosebumps" book that will give you what it says.
Rating: Summary: it was great!!! Review: I collect goosebumps books. I find that most of them are very good.My favorite one is Werewolf of the fever swamp (#14).But this is my second favorite one.I highley reccomed it.
Rating: Summary: Very Suspenseful! Review: I think this book is a real page turner. I like the part where the kids find out the real story about their dad's experiments. I like the way it was written, especially the ending. My name is Peter Smith. I am nine years old. I recommend this book to anyone who likes Goosebumps books
Rating: Summary: It made me feel I was part of the story! Review: I totally enjoyed it! It was in great detail and had a really interesting fictional story line.Great work R.L Stine!-Jessica Harrison,Melbourne,Victoria Australia.
Rating: Summary: ooooooohhhhhhh Review: In Stay Out Of The Basement, a girl's scientific father has been acting very strangely lately. She thinks that he might be half man and half plant. He has been working on an experiment for a very long time. His daughter wants to know what he is up to,so she goes into the basement to the lab and discovers that her Father's clone,who is made of plants,trapped her real dad in the closet. She couldn't tell which was which. Will she destroy her own father? Read the book and find out.
Rating: Summary: Recommended This to Any Kid That Finds It Hard to Read! Review: My first Goosebump book was " Welcome to Camp Nightmare", and I absoultley loves it! From then on I started to collect the Goosebumps series. When I enter High School, I stop reading. I still think that Goosebumps are the greatest. I am thinking about collecting them again because I want my children to read them. It is hard for children to read. It was hard for me to read. That one Goosebump changed my life completely. I fixing to be a Senior this August, and I really don't know what to say. I am back in the cycle of not reading. I am trying really hard to get back into the routine, but I can hardly finish a book because I jump to another, but I am trying will hard. Stay out the Basement was really a good book. What I like most about it was the suspense. It describe that Margaret and Casey was really worried about their father. I want you kids to know that reading is knowledge. Keep on reading it will take you places where you have not enter. It will make your knowledge expanded. I want to become a wirter now and to that I have to get back the most greatest thing I achieved: reading. So, you keep on reading and remember that it can start off with one book just like it did for me.
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