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The Creatures from Beyond Beyond

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Randi and her twin brother, Tyler, didn’t think it was such a great idea for their family to spend the summer in a vacant house in a small town called Blairingville. Boringville seemed more like it. But as it turns out, the vacation was anything but boring!

There’s a surprise in every closet here—and not the good kind. Alien creatures are lurking, mysterious dolls are growing, and there’s a sinister twelve-year-old boy with a powerful hypnotic pendant who may hold the key to the entire mystery. Now if Randi can just escape a monster’s clutches, send some space visitors back to who knows where, and regain control of her free will, she might just get her family back home in one piece. It’s another scary good read from the master of shriek-out-loud horror, R.L. Stine.

145 pages, Kindle Edition

First published April 13, 2012

124 people are currently reading
234 people want to read

About the author

R.L. Stine

1,675 books18.5k followers
Robert Lawrence Stine known as R. L. Stine and Jovial Bob Stine, is an American novelist and writer, well known for targeting younger audiences. Stine, who is often called the Stephen King of children's literature, is the author of dozens of popular horror fiction novellas, including the books in the Goosebumps, Rotten School, Mostly Ghostly, The Nightmare Room and Fear Street series.

R. L. Stine began his writing career when he was nine years old, and today he has achieved the position of the bestselling children's author in history. In the early 1990s, Stine was catapulted to fame when he wrote the unprecedented, bestselling Goosebumps® series, which sold more than 250 million copies and became a worldwide multimedia phenomenon. His other major series, Fear Street, has over 80 million copies sold.

Stine has received numerous awards of recognition, including several Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards and Disney Adventures Kids' Choice Awards, and he has been selected by kids as one of their favorite authors in the NEA's Read Across America program. He lives in New York, NY.

http://us.macmillan.com/itsthefirstda...

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5 stars
174 (47%)
4 stars
93 (25%)
3 stars
71 (19%)
2 stars
24 (6%)
1 star
7 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 35 reviews
Profile Image for Vishnu Chevli.
650 reviews603 followers
June 20, 2020
Bed time read for my 5 year old. One time read even for kids.
Profile Image for Brandon.
300 reviews12 followers
July 21, 2022
Creatures From Beyond Beyond starts with twins Tyler and Randi going to a vacation house with there family in Blaringville. Tyler gets the better room, one with posters of super heros and all kinds of cool stuff, while Randi gets one with a bunch of dolls. One night while trying to sleep Randi notices that one doll in particular is very big and lifelike .She notices that he has a sticky patch on the back of his head.She Presses it a few times and the doll turns into a real kid ! The kid goes under the bed for something but before he can get to it her brother sees the patch and begins pressing it turning him back into a boy .The kids naturally freak out and leave the boy doll alone for a while until they let their curiosity get the better of them and bring him back to life .This time tying him up with only his mouth available, so he will be able to explain.They bring him back and the boy tells them his name is Brad and explains why he got turned into a doll and I'm not even going to spoil anything else because this story is super short and I think it's another one to go in completely blind. The explanation is actually really dark and weird but it ends up not being entirely truthful .We get a second explanation that leads to another body swapping plot, wich gets pretty gross .I will admit the first half of Creatures From Beyond Beyond is alot better. The middle still finds a way to meander even for a short book, but it's still a really fun book. I give Creatures From Beyond Beyond a four out of five stars.
Profile Image for Ivy.
1,505 reviews76 followers
April 2, 2019
5 ⭐

An interesting read. Glad Randi was able to stop Brad. Wonder if her parents will adopt the creature. Also wonder if there are aliens among us.
25 reviews2 followers
February 7, 2022
If there was ever a book that felt like the now infamous “throw some random shit in there, see what sticks” archetype, it’s this one. But boy is it a dark and disturbing one. There is much consternation about this books history. It was apart of the Parachute Press Six Novellas released sometime in 2000/2001 during the transitional period of Goosebumps ending to Stine creating The Nightmare Room over with a different publisher. It’s been confirmed 3 out of the 6 books have origins outside of the novellas. The Adventures Of Shrinkman, thought to be lost and archived via Wayback Machine, was revealed sometime ago and reinforced that it is Series 2000 #26, The Incredible Shrinking Fifth Grader. Three Faces Of Me (shoutouts to Spongey444) is actually a Jovial Bob Stine book released in BantamnSkylark called The Amazing Adventures Of Me, Myself, and I. And My Alien Parents is actually a book Stine wrote for a UK exclusive series called “A Twist In The Tale”. That book is called You’re Not My Parents!. So what is The Creatures From Beyond Beyond? The Art Of Goosebumps by Sarah Rodriguez dropped some major knowledge that there was a slated book #27 in Series 2000 called “When The Snake Bites”. The question is now: is this book that book? But I’m getting sidetracked. Let’s discuss this book a little more.

So the main character is on vacation with her family and end up vacationing in a secluded, rural part of the country. Because the parents like vacationing to odd places. They end up in this house with weird rooms, to which her brother gets the coolest room. She’s stuck in a room full of dolls. One doll catches her eye and looks rather real or too real I should say. When her and her brother start messing with the doll after a bit of suspicion, something may or may not come out of that.

Then the story ventures down this weird concept of dolls potentially coming to life from alien technology that uses the technology to transport humans back to their home planet for buffet feasting or something to that effect. When they accidentally set off a beacon of contact to the aliens, they must hide and wait it out.

After that whole ordeal, the entire books tone shifts. A Deux Ex Machina of sorts is revealed by a certain character we meet in the story and for the main character comes a grizzly realization. The story goes down the ideas of torture, mind-control, body swapping, and skin-melting body horror. Luckily for our main character, she’s able to stop what is happening to her and the ending (which I won’t spoil) is very satisfying.

When it comes to a book like this, I’m honestly shocked this didn’t make it into the catalog of Series 2000 books. Was it bad timing to the series being cancelled or was this a story that Stine’s editors scrapped for being too OUT THERE? I couldn’t tell you. But I came away from this book feeling immensely satisfied. I haven’t addressed the elephant, why a 4⭐️ review? Well it’s a high 4 ⭐️‘A for me, I gave it a 4.7 out of 5 ⭐️. Which is a clear cut A. But I do have a drawback with it. Let me address this, and I’ll be blunt, there is a massive change in direction and tone about midway after the first half wraps up. It is rather wonky. BUT it has more positives than negatives, at least for me. Strangely enough, I like that recipe because it essentially offers two separate climaxes in one story, which I don’t see often done in Goosebumps books. And it isn’t like what you might be thinking, there are two completely different acts of this book both having conflict and resolution in their own regards. There’s some ideas here I absolutely love. The main villain is an intimate villain, using manipulation, deceit, alien technology, mind-control, sadistic behavior, and family to get what they want. And the main character, who is rather flat but is base level enough to work, has some genuinely creepy things happen to them in the book. I’ll leave you with one scene: basically the villain reveals themselves to the main character and reveals what he plans to do with her, and her family. It’s shuddering to read that entire thing, you’ll know when it happens when you read it!

I have lots more of what I want to say but I’ll leave it with this, PICK THIS BOOK UP. Recently Amazon acquired publishing rights back in 2012 and if you have prime, it’s $5 shipped to your door. It’s weird, gross, scary, intense, and satisfying for how experimental it feels. Don’t miss out, try this one.
Profile Image for Weathervane.
321 reviews7 followers
May 9, 2016
Emanates weird, vibrant -- the combo of tropes, acknowledged by Stine in the intro, surprises enough to hold the reader's interest. Lagged a bit when the protagonist was being controlled; also wish we had learned a bit more about the aliens.
Profile Image for C-shaw.
852 reviews60 followers
September 5, 2018
Like Stephen King, R.L. Stine is what he is, unashamedly. This is a silly, young-middle-school-boy's "horror" story.
Profile Image for Lybo Buchanan.
259 reviews1 follower
March 27, 2019
I really enjoyed this short story/novella. It's really more of a children's story, but this adult loved it too. It was a lot of fun, from beginning to end, to see how Randi manages to outwit the alien that has her under his mind control, & saves her family.
Profile Image for Raven.
708 reviews14 followers
August 7, 2014
Tristan liked this book, and so did I!
Profile Image for Diane.
1,140 reviews40 followers
August 14, 2014
Pretty dark for children's story. short interesting adventure
Profile Image for Centauri.
Author 1 book4 followers
February 7, 2021
It is difficult to talk about the story without giving away anything, but I will try
(SPOILERS just in case)
The parents are cliche archetypes: they don't pay attention to children, they don't listen to kids when trouble starts, and they are reactionary (grounding children that normally behave when they do something out of the ordinary). So, that was disappointing.

The story left me with far more questions than gratification of reading a mystery, thriller, sci-fi story. Who was the family that allowed their house to be put up as a swap house, when dangers abound within their walls? Like, was the family the enemy the whole time, and they swap houses for seasons at a time to lure or bait victims? That would have been cool.
Right of the bat I knew not to trust the doll. I mean, its a doll for starters. Beyond that (no pun intended, but beware SPOILERS), the character knew absolutely too many details about the "antagonists" to simply have been just another victim. What was the reasoning for their dire circumstance? What nefarious deeds had they committed?

I think my problem is that this story was condensed, poorly, into a children's tale when it could have been easily a young adult fiction novel of more girth. Addressing the plot holes and such would have made this a far better read.
With that said, I tried to rate it based on the intended audience and if the goals were executed. For my personal reference, ignoring intent and audience, I think I would rate 2 stars.
Profile Image for Jennifer.
385 reviews7 followers
October 6, 2020
The Creature

Great spooky read. I would recommend this one for older kids aged 12 and up because this could be scary for children younger than that. But parents should read this one with your child because it would be fun to do so.
Profile Image for Jirac Thachar.
Author 4 books4 followers
February 11, 2021
Con R.L. Stine enuentras giros inesperados y mucha aventura. Sin duda es uno de los autores que más me han inspirado a escribir. La lectura es ligera y divertida, con suficiente dosis de miedo para los más pequeños; los niños amarán este libro, y los adultos, como yo, también.
848 reviews4 followers
March 5, 2023
The Creatures from Beyond Beyond

A really quick read for kids, but it was still fun. Aliens from outer space that look like lizards and take human kids to be served for meals. Worked for nightmares for growing kids and even for some of us grownups. R L Stone is good for everyone.
Profile Image for Sandra Lopez.
Author 3 books343 followers
September 8, 2024
A strange new house and a doll coming to life. Whoa! The kid said aliens had shrunk him. Aliens! Aliens that ate kids! Yikes! Suddenly, these kids were being chased by ugly space reptiles. Then it turns into a case of a body switch. A good, scary read!
Profile Image for lina.
251 reviews15 followers
May 15, 2017
Loved it

I love r.l stine since I was a child and now I a enjoying then with my 4 year old niece...

Love sci-fi this is a goos introduction to sci-fi. 5 aliens out of 5
Profile Image for Isaiah.
1 review
June 6, 2017
Amazing Book!

Omg okay this book kind of scared me like brad melting monsters aliens all of that! I will recommend this to people who like horror books Seriously this book is great!
Profile Image for Mana.
805 reviews2 followers
January 15, 2020
Wow

Classic R.L. Stine. You like his previous books you'll like this one. Surprised at the ending but in a good way. Nuff said.
30 reviews1 follower
May 23, 2020
A very brilliant book of a brother and sister twins and an alien from outer space. Pretty out of this world.
Profile Image for Bonnie.
113 reviews2 followers
July 13, 2023
Loved this one too. A very fun read.
55 reviews
July 25, 2023
I feel like it was a lot longer than the other books by R.L. Stine that aren't Goosebumps books.
Profile Image for Kaiden Adams.
100 reviews2 followers
March 29, 2024
This book was a little bit scary for me. Just a little. The doll was so creepy, with the skin peeling off. I loved this book. It made me feel scared and jumpy. I would definitely read it again.
Profile Image for sanchit varma.
54 reviews
May 9, 2025
Absolute goofy nonsense - it's like RL Stine tried to cram in as many horror tropes as he could in one ridiculous concoction.
55 reviews
August 10, 2014
Ok, it's a cute book. I spent the first 3rd of the book wondering where the story was going, because it was a bit ho-hum, but once it got going, it got going, and it was very hard to put down. The middle third of the book was great and the climax was fine. The resolution and ending felt very rushed, and may have benefited from at least another 5 to 10 pages, because there were some issues that weren't resolved, involving the reaction/response of the family of the protagonist. And I'm still wondering how the antagonist ended up where he was, when we first met him, and whether or not the family who owned the home were aware of him (or if they even existed, as this was all part of the antagonist's plan). Of course, as an adult reading a kid's book, you can't help but look for some logic, when there just isn't any.

It's a very quick read for an adult. Late elementary through junior high ages would enjoy this, and the language isn't overly difficult for them. It's not so scary that they would have nightmares, but there's just enough WTF to make it an enjoyable read.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 35 reviews

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