The Lost Girl (Fear Street Relaunch), by R. L. Stine
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The Lost Girl (Fear Street Relaunch), by R. L. Stine
Read Ebook The Lost Girl (Fear Street Relaunch), by R. L. Stine
Generations of children and teens have grown up on R.L. Stine's bestselling and hugely popular horror series, Fear Street and Goosebumps. Now, the Fear Street series is back with a chilling new installment, packed with pure nightmare fodder that will scare Stine's avid fan base of teen readers and adults. New student Lizzy Palmer is the talk of Shadyside High. Michael and his girlfriend Pepper befriend her, but the closer they get to her, the stranger she seems… and the more attractive she is to Michael. He invites her to join him on a snowmobile race that ends in a tragic accident. Soon, Michael's friends start being murdered, and Pepper becomes convinced that Lizzy is behind the killings. But to her total shock, she and Michael are drawn into a tragic story of an unthinkable betrayal committed over 60 years ago. Frightening and tense in the way that only this master of horror can deliver, The Lost Girl is another terrifying Fear Street novel by the king of juvenile horror.
The Lost Girl (Fear Street Relaunch), by R. L. Stine- Amazon Sales Rank: #284444 in Books
- Published on: 2015-09-29
- Released on: 2015-09-29
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 8.49" h x 1.01" w x 5.73" l, .0 pounds
- Binding: Hardcover
- 272 pages
About the Author R.L. STINE is one of the bestselling children's authors in history, with more than 400 million books sold to date. In 1989, Stine created the Fear Street series, one of the bestselling young adult book series in history, with 80 million copies sold worldwide. He is also the author of the bestselling children's series Goosebumps, which began in 1992 and has sold 300 million copies around the world.
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Most helpful customer reviews
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful. This review will probably date me but that’s fine. Back in the the days of scholastic book ... By Emily This book took me way way back to my youth. This review will probably date me but that’s fine. Back in the the days of scholastic book order forms, I looked forward to scouring them for R.L. Stine novels. I started reading his books back when the original Fear Street series was being released and I read every one. This was way back before he started writing Goosebumps but when those came out, I read those too. I remember Say Cheese! as a particular favorite. I was a huge fan in late elementary school and early jr high. R.L. Stine definitely honed my love of horror novels and paved the way for me to fall in love with Stephen King later in life.I had hoped that reading Lost Girl would be a lot like revisiting my childhood love. My memories of the original Fear Street novels are scary mysteries. Some of the books had paranormal overtones but most were teenage mystery novels with villains hellbent on revenge. Usually the villain was a part of the main characters’ group of friends and they would slowing pick off members of the group, one by one until the final reveal.This book started off like that as well, following the familiar format that I was expecting. For the most part, I think this book was a great example of the classic Fear Street series. The book bounces between viewpoints in the past and in the present. which I really liked. However I thought that the book’s finale had a very unsatisfying end. I didn’t like the explanation of how some things happened and the complete lack of explanation about other things. I wanted the end to be more explicit and less implied. For a mystery-ish horror novel like this one I really wanted things to be more tied with a bow in the end.This book left me wondering what happened.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. Stine's so to be approved for this title I was extremely happy. I don't think I had read this one ... By Autumn Fallen Over Book Reviews I received this book via NetGalley to give an honest review.I have always been a huge fan of R.L. Stine's so to be approved for this title I was extremely happy. I don't think I had read this one growing up so I knew I had to read it. This book is no different than the rest of his Fear Street books. There isn't really anything scary about them unless you are a young kid now I read the stories and I am like oh wow and this freaked me out when I was 10. In Lost Girl we go between the 1950's and the present time they both go together and it all makes sense towards the end though you may start understanding it a lot earlier. In Shadyside in the year 1950 Beth and her family were happy her father was starting up his own stables so it was a good time for the family until something tragic happens. Fast forward to the present here we meet Michael, Pepper and their friends. When a new girl named Lizzy comes to Shadyside High Michael seems to like her even though he is dating Pepper. Lizzy is the character that is very beautiful and you can see Pepper getting very upset with Michael over the way he acts with her. Lizzy shows up everywhere it seems and she is fascinated with Michael even though he doesn't see it. When a fatal accident happens weird things start happening to those that are friends with Michael and it seems that Michael is in the center of it all. Who is Lizzy and what does she want? What does the past have to do with the present?The plot is good the characters act like teenagers (which they are.) Yes some of their actions don't seem right at times especially in the case of Michael but it works for this story line. If you haven't read Fear Street books I have to recommend them to you. They are just classic regular stories that will have you wanting to read more by this author. I did enjoy how in this book he did really good descriptions of things. One of my favorite descriptions is as followed this is only part of it. " Her skin began to peel. Patches of skin dropped off her forehead, her face, and I could see her cheekbones. She tried to scream but uttered only a hoarse croak. I uttered a horrified cry as her tongue fell out and hit the cave floor. A pale blog of meat, it wriggled for a few seconds, then went still."
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. The first big clunker in the "Fear Street" reboot, this is stupid and obvious. By Mimsy Itonia Beth Palmieri watches her father get murdered by a rival in 1950. She escapes the murderers and escapes into a cave, never to be seen again. Even if you haven't read Stine's "Beach House", which has the exact same twist, you'll have a pretty good idea of what happens to her.In the present day, Michael Frost is captivated by new girl Lizzy Walker (not Palmer), much to the consternation of his girlfriend Pepper. Lizzy invites herself along to a snowboarding outing with Michael and his friends. Michael runs into a person with his snowmobile, presumably killing him. Lizzy identifies the guy as Angel, says he was a bad guy, and they all take off. A change of heart has them returning to the scene, only to find the body missing.Soon, Angel is contacting Michael and threatening to kill him and his friends. Indeed, the threats start to come true.What a truly insipid book. As soon as the book moves into the present day and Lizzy shows up, it's groan-inducingly obvious exactly how this is going to play out. The plot offers up absolutely zero surprises as it lurches from one laboured plot point to the next, with Lizzy acting like the obvious time-travelling fruitloop she is, and Michael being astoundingly thick-headed in regards to her behaviour.The book has no real feeling for its own world. We're told that Beth has "powers", but it is extremely vague in how and when she can use them. One minute she can nearly choke somebody to death, the next minute she can't do a thing because she's apparently too scared. There are no rules for the narrative to follow, so later in the story, Beth/Lizzy can once again perform magic at will."Fear Street" protagonists aren't known for their intelligence, but Michael Frost is a particularly non-cluey example. The book attempts to explain it away as being a part of Beth/Lizzy's ill-defined "powers", but even that can't excuse his lousy decision-making. Basically, he's an idiot thinking with the wrong head.Other gripes would be the fact this is another supernatural entry in a series that once predominately featured non-supernatural stories, usually told by a third-person female narrator. These books just don't work as well with a male protagonist, and I'm not a fan of the move to first person for all of them.There's a formula for "Fear Street" - a very simple formula! Third-person female protagonist caught up in a non-supernatural scary sequence of events that she overcomes without the help of parents/adult figures and learns a valuable lesson.R.L. Stine clearly wants to update these books to reflect modern story-telling trends, but I don't see the point when the plot is so glaringly obvious at every single step. Unless you're 9 (and the strong gore and violence in this book means it shouldn't be read by anybody under 12), you're not going to be fooled by a single thing here.I didn't hate it, and I'm a long-time, die-hard fan of the series, so I'm not giving it one star, but it's definitely the worst one so far in the "Fear Street" reboot.
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