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Emily=) bowles

R.L. Stine Biography | Author Bio | Books | Rotten School | Fear Street | Goosebumps | ... - 2 views

  • Birthdate: October 8, 1943 Birthplace: Columbus, Ohio Real Name: Robert Lawrence Stine
  • scaring kids
  • 20 years
  • ...40 more annotations...
  • Courtesy of HarperCollins
  • climbed up into his attic and found an old typewriter
  • nine years old
  • joke books
  • writing ever since
  • humor
  • editor
  • ten years
  • make kids laugh
  • do have a phobia that my nephews think is just insane - I cannot jump into water. I have to step into swimming pools. It's a real phobia, but my nephews think it's hilarious that this scary guy is so terrified of jumping into water."
  • magazin
  • Banana
  • rom the Ohio State University,
  • graduated f
  • small magazines
  • start writing novels
  • 28 years old
  • Goosebumps
  • y Nickelodeon TV show,
  • The Nightmare Room
  • a TV Show.
  • he set out
  • 1989 - R.L. Stine team
  • best-seller.
  • ed up with Parachute Press to release his first horror series,
  • R.L. Stine used to write for a children's humor magazine called Bananas. He was known as Jovial Bob Stine.
  • which was aimed at 9-14 year olds
  • 1986 - R.L. Stine wrote Blind Date, his first scary novel for teens. It immediately became a
  • 1992 - R.L. Stine releases a new book series - Goosebumps. This series is aimed at younger kids, but still delivers some scary tales. The book series eventually spun off into
  • R.L. Stine has a son named Matt who is 25 years old.
  • R.L. Stine's books have been translated into more than 28 languages and are best-sellers around the world!
  • R.L. Stine writes an average of two books a month!
  • R.L. Stine comes up with the titles of his books first and then works from there, while most authors come up with the title last.
  • R.L. Stine was named the #1 best-selling author in America for three straight years between 1994 and 1996
  • ries like
  • for more than
  • He's bee
  • with s
  • writing
  • Fear Street,
  •  
    Some facts about R. l Stine.
  •  
    Phobias and about how he writes
victoria fuller

Reading Rockets: A video interview with R.L. Stine - 0 views

  • R.L. Stine wrote humor and joke books until an editor asked him to write a young adult horror novel. After Blind Date became an instant best seller, Stine started a young adult horror series called Fear Street. In 1992, R.L. Stine wrote his first book for Goosebumps, which would quickly become the best-selling children's book series in history.
  • Robert Lawrence Stine was born in Columbus, Ohio in 1943. Stine was a rather shy and fearful child, but he did have a clever imagination. At the age of nine, Stine began typing up his own short stories and humor magazines such as Tales to Drive You Batty. He would then circulate these publications to friends during class. In high school, Stine wrote a humor column for the school newspaper called "Stine's Lines." At Ohio State University, R.L. Stine edited a humor magazine and contributed articles under the name "Jovial Bob." After college, he moved to New York City with aspirations of becoming a writer. For 16 years, R.L. Stine worked at Scholastic, where he edited and wrote for a humor magazine called Bananas. Stine also wrote for Nickelodeon's television show, Eureeka's Castle. R.L. Stine's first children's book, How to be Funny, was published in 1978. Stine wrote humor and joke books until one day an editor asked him to write a young adult horror novel. After Blind Date became an instant best seller, Stine started a young adult horror series called Fear Street. In 1992 R.L. Stine wrote his first book for Goosebumps, which would quickly became the best-selling children's book series in history. Stine also hosted the top-rated Goosebumps television show on Fox. Today R.L. Stine writes books for two new series, Mostly Ghostly and Rotten School. He and his wife live in New York City.
  • Robert Lawrence Stine
  •  
    this is a video interview about Robert Lawrence Stine(R.L Stine)
Emily=) bowles

R.L. Stine:Biography - 1 views

  • R. L. Stine is the author of over 100 novels for children
  • After high school he became a
    • Emily=) bowles
       
      He really taught Soc.St after collage!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
  • ...9 more annotations...
  • R. L. Stine has sold over 90 million books and yet is still unfamiliar to adult readers. In 1995, he published his first adult book - a horror story called Superstitious. Even though the novel didnโ€™t do well, Stine commanded $1 million for Superstitious screen rights. Goosebumps was produced as a TV series for the Fox TV Network beginning in 1995.
  • He writes over 24 novels a year. Stineโ€™s thrillers contain age-appropriate chills. No one dies in Goosebumps and the novels are geared to grade-schoolers. But, for adolescents, heads roll in Fear Street. The Goosebumps horror series, published by Scholastic for 7-12 year olds, has consumed readers since 1989.
  • student at Ohio State University, where he graduated with a B.A. in education in 1965. Stine taught social studies after college. He married his wife, Jane, on June 22, 1969. Their son, Matt Daniel Stine, was born on June 7, 1980.
  • Stineโ€™s awards include the
  • Children's Choice Award and the American Library Association Award.
  • the pseudonyms Eric Affabee, Zachary Blue, and Jovial Bob Stine
  • s written under
  • Biography
  • R.L. Stine
  •  
    biography info on R.L. Stine
  •  
    He also has awards listed on here but only 2 out of like alot
Sam Hughes

RL Stine .org - Biography, Pictures, Videos, & Quotes - 0 views

shared by Sam Hughes on 20 Apr 11 - No Cached
    • Sam Hughes
       
      R.L. Stine's first book he ever wrote was Blind Date.
  • In 1990 R L Stine joined the parachute press and wrote Fear Street,
    • Sam Hughes
       
      In 1990 R. L. Stine joined the parachute press and wrote Fear Street. :)
    • Sam Hughes
       
      His books are available in 32 languages!!!!!!! :O
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • Today. R L Stineโ€™s books are available in 32 languages and sales figures have crossed over 300 million copies across the globe.
  • Blind Date was the first teen horror novel which R L Stine wrote in 1987
  • followed by Hit and Run, Beach House and The Girl friend.
Emily=) bowles

r l stine photo - Bing Images - 2 views

  •  
    picture of R.L. Stine
victoria fuller

R.L. Stine's The Haunting Hour l Full Episodes | Episode 19: Lights Out - 0 views

  •  
    movie of r l stine the haunting hour
Sam Hughes

Author Profile: R. L. Stine - 0 views

  • L. Stine
  • Goosebumpsยฎ series,
  • catapulted to fame when he wrote the unprecedented, bestsellin
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • sold more than 250 million copies
  • Stine was
  • His other major series, Fear Street, has over 80 million copies sold
  • R. L. Stine has received numerous awards of recognition, including several Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards and Disney Adventures Kids' Choice Awards
  • R. L. Stine
Sam Hughes

What elementary school did r.l. stine go to? | ChaCha Answers - 0 views

  • What elementary school did r.l. stine go to?
  • Scary book writer R L Stine attended Cassingham Elementary School in Bexley, Ohio.
victoria fuller

r l stine PICTURE - Bing Images - 2 views

  • 1-62 Complete Goosebumps Books
  •  
    Good picture how many books are there
  •  
    how many books!! :O
Emily=) bowles

Answers.com - Does rl stine have a wife - 2 views

  • The author Robert Laurence Stine (known as R. L. Stine) married editor and writer Jane Waldhorn in 1969. The wife also developed Parachute Press with a business partner.
  •  
    R.L. Stine's wife
Carly Felty

Margaret Haddix Biography - 3 views

  • When my daughter was in third grade, she brought home a list one day that described what everyone in her class wanted to be when they grew up. Most of the kids clearly picked the same jobs their parents held. But a few went for the fantastical
  •   As a kid, I also longed for a career that I didnโ€™t actually believe real people got to do.
    • autumn holder
       
      Margaret Haddix has 2 kids
  •   I grew up on a farm about halfway between two small towns:
  • ...93 more annotations...
  • Washington Court House, Ohio, and Sabina, Ohio.
  • When we went on family vacations, my parents were always saying things like, โ€œWould you guys stop reading for a minute and look out the window? Thatโ€™s the Grand Canyon weโ€™re driving past!โ€
  • But then my
  • mom would laugh and say, โ€œThatโ€™s exactly what my parents always
  • said to me when I was a kid!
  • The people I met in books always seemed very real to me: as a kid, I counted among my friends the whip-smart New York kids of E.L. Konigsburg books, Harriet the Spy, Anne of Green Gables, Louisa May Alcottโ€™s Little Women, Anne Frank, Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm, The Little Princessโ€™ Sara Crewe, L.M. Montgomeryโ€™s Emily Byrd Starr, Beanie Malone
  • I did major in creative writing, but I also majored in journalism (and history, just for fun). Except for the summer after my freshman year of college, when I worked as
  • at a 4-H camp (which was lots and lots of fun), every job Iโ€™ve held since then has been related to writing in some way.
  • an assistant coo
  • I worked on my school newspaper and had summer internships at newspapers in Urbana, Ohio; Charlotte, North Carolina; and Indianapolis, Indiana. After college,
  • then quickly moved back to Indianapolis to work as a newspaper reporter there.
  • During high school, I acted in school plays; played flute and piccolo in the marching, pep and symphonic bands; sang in the school choir; worked on the school newspaper; ran track one year; competed on a school quick-recall team; served on the county junior fair board;
  • Living in a foreign country is a great way to force yourself to really think about, โ€œWho am I?โ€ โ€œWhat shaped me as a person?โ€ โ€œWhy do I believe what I believe?โ€ โ€œWhat do I want out of life?โ€ โ€œWhat shaped all these people I see around me?โ€ โ€œWhy do they believe what they believe?โ€ โ€œWhat do they want out of life?โ€
  • For most of my time as a journalist, I worked as a general assignment reporter, which meant that I could be covering a fire one day, a scientific breakthrough the next, a politicianโ€™s news conference the next. (Or, on really busy days, some combination of several vastly different
  • It also inspired me to play with different plots and characters and settings in my head. Facts werenโ€™t enough for me. I still also wanted fiction
  • But a few went for the fantastical.
  • When my daughter was in third grade, she brought home a list one day that described what everyone in her class wanted to be when they grew up
  • ay that described what everyone in her class wanted to be when they grew up. Most of
    • Carly Felty
       
      How she got started and some of her history.
    • shayla daugherty
       
      this has lots of stuff about her childhood and her family.
  • I come from both a long line of farmers, and a long line of bookworms.
  • nurses (like my mom)
  • One kid said he wanted to be a spy; another was longing to be a professional dirt-biker; another saw himself as a future movie director. And I looked at that list and thought, โ€œYep, Iโ€™m with the dirt-biker and the spy.โ€
  • farmers (like my dad
  •   I grew up on a farm about halfway between two small towns: Washington Court House, Ohio, and Sabina, Ohio.
  •    As a kid, I also longed for a career that I didnโ€™t actually believe real people got to do. The far-out, only-in-your dreams career I wanted was to be an author.
  • โ€œWould you guys stop reading for a minute and look out the window? Thatโ€™s the Grand Canyon weโ€™re driving past!
  • How many of my ancestors, immigrating to America, had to admonish their kids, โ€œWould you put down that book and look out? Donโ€™t you want to see our new home?โ€
  • To me, it didnโ€™t seem to be much of a step to go from loving books to wanting to create books of my own
  • The people I met in books always seemed very real to me: as a kid, I counted among my friends the whip-smart New York kids of E.L. Konigsburg books, Harriet the Spy, Anne of Green Gables, Louisa May Alcottโ€™s Little Women, Anne Frank, Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm, The Little Princessโ€™ Sara Crewe, L.M. Montgomeryโ€™s Emily Byrd Starr, Beanie Malone, and many, many others.
  • But I would go home and also write different kinds of stories, ones based more on my own imagination and my sense that there could be some sort of higher truth than just โ€œfacts.โ€
  • er and th
  • One kid said he wanted to be a spy; another was longing to be a professional dirt-biker; another saw himself as a future movie director. And I looked at that list and thought, โ€œYep, Iโ€™m with the dirt-biker and the spy.โ€
  • and did volunteer work through my church and 4-H clubs.
  • Washington Court House, Ohio, and Sabina, Ohio.
  • indow?
  • (Lest you think I was some multi-talented prodigy, I should point out that Iโ€™m a terrible singer, a terrible actor, and, as a runner, Iโ€™m really, really good at walking
  • One of the advantages of going to a fairly small school is that, if youโ€™re not too afraid of making a fool of yourself, theyโ€™ll let you try just about any activity.
  • ) In college, one of the best things I did was spend a semester studying in Luxembourg, a small country nestled between France, Germany and Belgium.
  • fairly small school is that, if youโ€™r
  • But it was being a reporter that really gave me the opportunity to meet lots of different people, in vastly different circumstances. It never failed to amaze me that I could sit down with people, and begin asking really, really nosy questions, and because I was from the newspaper, they would almost always answer.
  • events, all at once.)
  • or most of my time as a journalist, I worked as a general assignment report
  • characters and settings in my head. Facts werenโ€™t enough for me. I still als
  • Somehow, for me, hearing so many different stories from so many different people--and witnessing so many different events--didnโ€™t just inspire me to write it all down
  • ould go home and also write different kinds of stories, ones based mo
  • . So during this time, I had a lot more ideas for fiction than I actually wrote down.
  •   It was also during this time that I got married. My husband, Doug, and I met in college, and he also went into journalism right after school.
  • When he got a job as city editor of a newspaper in Danville, Illinois, it seemed like a big complication for my career. If I wanted to continue
  • as a newspaper reporter, I knew Iโ€™d probably have to have my husband as a boss.
  • My husband and I agreed to see this complication as an opportunity: this would be my chance to concentrate on fiction
  • . I took part-time jobs teaching writing at a community college and doing freelance business writing, but I also wrote Running Out of Time; Donโ€™t You Dare Read This, Mrs. Dunphrey; and numerous short stories. While I was working on those, my husband and I also decided to start a family.
  • Like most writers, I went through an agonizing phase of submitting my work and collecting nothing but rejection letters for quite a while
  • For me, this phase lasted long enough that, by the time I sold my first two books (both at once, actually) our daughter, Meredith, was a year and a half old, and I was pregnant with our second child, Connor.
  • ents were alwa
  • then my
  • same j
  • higher truth than
  • But I w
  • Why do
  • nference the next.
  • anted ficti
  • ith different
  • spaper; ran track
  • Still, it was a little challenging to be a newly published author at the same time that I was becoming a new mother.
  • For those first few years, I wrote only during my kidsโ€™ naptime, when I probably should have been napping myself.
  •    Since then, my life has changed quite a bit. My husband and kids and I moved from Illinois to Clarks Summit, Pennsylvania, to Columbus, Ohio
  •     And thatโ€™s why I became a writer.
  • In a hurry? See a short biography. Writing a Report
  • Start Here
  • nd symphonic b
  • ep and sympho
  • year; competed on
  • I want out of life
  • great wa
  • t I could be covering a fire one day, a scientific breakthrough the next, a p
  • in the sch
  • ol, I acted i
  • ll team; ser
  • e school ne
  • ymphon
  • believe?โ€ โ€œWh
  • t do they wa
  • am I?โ€ โ€œ
  • country
  • nation of
  • cianโ€™s news
  • ich meant th
  • nspired me to pl
  • n my own imagination and
  • ust โ€œfa
  • ough that, by the time I sold my first two b
  • parents held
  • tions, my pa
  •  
    Has a lot of good info about her life and how she got started.
  •  
    Has a lot of good info about her life and how she got started.
Sam Hughes

R.L. Stine ยป About R.L. - 0 views

shared by Sam Hughes on 02 May 11 - No Cached
    • Sam Hughes
       
      go on to the other pages.
  • In 1989 he created the Fear Street series
  • started typing stories and little joke books.
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • sold over 350 million books
  • Goosebumps began in 1992
  • In 1986, R.L. turned scary! He wrote his first teen horror novel, Blind Date, which became an instant best-seller. Many scary novels followed, including Beach House, Hit And Run, The Babysitter, and The Girlfriend.
  • He was born in Columbus, Ohio in 1943
Sam Hughes

R L Stine - 0 views

    • Sam Hughes
       
      wow!
  • R L Stine is the best-selling children's author in history.
  • After the enormous success of Fear Street, Stine and Parachute went on to launch Goosebumps
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • the best-selling book series that made Stine an international celebrity and
  • the #1 best-selling author in America for several years
  • R. L. Stine lives in Manhattan with his wife, their teenage son, Matt, and their dog, Nadine.
Sam Hughes

Teenreads.com - FEAR STREET NIGHTS by R. L. Stine - 0 views

    • Sam Hughes
       
      Summery of FEAR STREET NIGHTS by R.L. Stine
  • FEAR STREET NIGHTS by R. L. Stine
  • Lewis, Jamie and their friends become fed up with their lack of space and freedom, so they decide to do something about it. They call themselves The Night People, sneaking out of their
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • e they finally can have some room to be themselves. Sometimes they get a l
  • homes to meet in the dark, private, early morning hours wher
  • ittle crazy and pull a prank or two, but these stunts are basically harmless. Most of the time they just hang out at the old abandoned Fear Mansion, relishing their freedom.
  • Then one day they accidentally discover a hidden room stacked high with awesome artifacts and interesting treasures. Everyone helps themselves to the stash. No harm done when the already abandoned mansion is scheduled to be demolished, right? So they think.
  • Suddenly, weird and frightening things start happening. The Night People decide to dig for the truth and a way to stop the evil before someone gets seriously hurt...or worse.
victoria fuller

The Hub Games | R.L Stine's Game: Rotten School Splash Attack - 2 views

  •  
    game by r l Stine.
  •  
    cool game
victoria fuller

The Hub Games | R.L Stine's Game: Escape From the Haunted Mansion - 0 views

  •  
    A game from r l Stine.
victoria fuller

The Hub TV Networks | Watch Episode Clips | Full Episodes | Behind the Scenes | Hubworl... - 1 views

  •  
    Some r.l stine videos are on this channel
Nicole Hicks

R.L. Stine - 0 views

shared by Nicole Hicks on 18 Apr 11 - No Cached
  •  
    SCARY! This is The World of R.L. Stine!!
Emily=) bowles

R. L. Stine - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 1 views

    • Emily=) bowles
       
      Can't believe he has sold so many books. He has sold over 400 million books.
  • Stine was born in Columbus, Ohio[5] to Anne Stine, a homemaker and Lewis Stine, a shipping clerk.[6] He began writing at age 9 when he found a typewriter in his attic, subsequently beginning to type stories and joke books.
  • In 1989, Stine teamed up with Parachute Press to create Fear Street.
  • ...10 more annotations...
  • In 1992, Stine created a comedy series called Space Cadets which lasted only three books. Also in 1992, Stine and Parachute went on to launch Goosebumps
  • His books have sold over 400 million copies worldwide,[4] landing on many bestseller lists.
  • In three consecutive years during the 1990s, USA Today named Stine as America's number one best-selling author.[11
  • the Guinness Book of World Records named Stine as the best-selling children's book series author of all time
  • n the first decade of the 21st century, Stine has worked on installments of five different book series, Mostly Ghostly, Rotten School, Fear Street, The Nightmare Room, Goosebumps Horrorland and the stand-alone novels Dangerous Girls
  • On June 22, 1969, Stine married Jane Waldhorn, who became an editor and writer[8] and formed Parachute Press with Joan Waricha on April 1, 1983.[16] Their only child, Matthew, was born on June 7, 1980[8] and works in the music industry.[17
  • Among the awards he has received are the 2002 Champion of Reading Award
  • the Disney Adventures Kids' Choice Award for Best Book-Mystery/Horror (three-time recipient) and the Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards (also received three times).[11] During the 1990s, Stine was listed on People Weekly's "Most Intriguing People" list,
  • He won the Thriller Writers of America Silver Bullet Award in 2007. His stories have even inspired R. L. Stine's Haunted Lighthouse, 4D movie-based attractions at SeaWorld San Diego and Busch Gardens Europe.[citation needed]
  • In 1986, Stine wrote his first horror novel, called Blind Date.[9
victoria fuller

r . l stine - Bing Images - 0 views

    • victoria fuller
       
      I think a lot of people in Celeste have read this book already!
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