Man-Thing was a character created around fifty years ago (about the same time as his more famous DC cousin, Swamp-Thing) by Roy Thomas, Gerry Conway, Grey Morrow, and (of course!) Stan Lee. (Apropos of nothing, does anyone remember The Heap?) Steve Gerber's long, crazed run on the book is a cult-classic, and Chris Claremont had a successful run, too. Bobbi Morse (Mockingbird) and Howard the Duck were introduced in Man-Thing stories... so there's a lot of history with many high-points. I think R.L. Stine was trying to channel Gerber's tone, but it just all kinds of falls short and flat. It's just not a comprehensible story, though there are some funny bits and lines. Back in the day, I read dozens of Stine's Goosebumps books to my youngest daughter, but his take on Man-Thing, while enthusiastic, in nothing but disappointing. Thankfully, the book also includes five individual short-short stories by Stine that are quite delightful. They're little morality vignettes reminiscent of the EC horror classics. The Man-Thing art by Peralta is okay (sometimes he makes Man-Thing look like a Frank R. Paul interpretation of a Lovecraft creature, but that's okay), but the five closing short pieces are all illustrated by a different artist, and all are quite good and fit their stories excellently. Skim the first part and then enjoy the short pieces. Excelsior!