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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Awsome book!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
This book is the best book I,ve ever read.
It gets you thinking whats going to happen next. I read this book in 3 days. I couldn't stop reading it. There was nothing I didn't like about it. Its about a kid named Joe, who's dad loves lawn ortimants. He buys these two gnome figures. Right after he bought them bad things started happing. Something keeps digging up Mr...
Published on May 27, 2002

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars WORST BOOK EVER
It's A "Scary" Book about gardening
RL Stine, for future reference, here's a cheat sheet:

Things that are scary: Monsters. Ghosts. Nuclear war.
Things that are not scary: Gardening. Gnomes. Gardening.
this was the last Goosebumps book I read as a child. Now I know why.

Look, Seriously, the Entire Book is About Gardening
Maybe I...
Published on April 13, 2009 by Virginia Blalock


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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Awsome book!!!!!!!!!!!!!!, May 27, 2002
A Kid's Review
This book is the best book I,ve ever read.
It gets you thinking whats going to happen next. I read this book in 3 days. I couldn't stop reading it. There was nothing I didn't like about it. Its about a kid named Joe, who's dad loves lawn ortimants. He buys these two gnome figures. Right after he bought them bad things started happing. Something keeps digging up Mr. McCalls garden. Joe's dog is always tied up. So it can't be the dog. At night he hears something in the bushes. He gets up, and looks out the window, And what does he find. Could it be racoons in the bushes or the GNOMES.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars WORST BOOK EVER, April 13, 2009
It's A "Scary" Book about gardening

RL Stine, for future reference, here's a cheat sheet:

Things that are scary: Monsters. Ghosts. Nuclear war.

Things that are not scary: Gardening. Gnomes. Gardening.

this was the last Goosebumps book I read as a child. Now I know why.

Look, Seriously, the Entire Book is About Gardening

Maybe I haven't stressed this enough.There's an entire chapter about the whole family cheerfully spraying plants with insecticide.

In short,The Worst Goosebumps Book.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the best of the series!, June 1, 2005
By 
I have read almost all of the Goosebumps Books, and this one always stands out in the crowd to me. It has a very good storyline and even though it is one of the more "unrealistic", it is one of my personal favorites.

The story is about a dad who likes lawn ornaments and buys two lawn gnomes from a store down the street. When the neighbors garden keeps getting trashed, the pet Rottweiler is blamed. When the havoc continues after the dog has been tied up, the children of the house are blamed. What will they have to do to prove that they are innocent? And who in the world could be doing the mischief? Read and find out! Hope this was helpful!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars VERY GOOD!, February 6, 2005
This review is from: Revenge of the Lawn Gnomes (Goosebumps Presents TV Book #18) (Paperback)
I Like This Book!

When Joe's father had two lawn gnomes, strange things started to happen. One day, Joe and Mindy heard a disturbing news to their neighbors. Then Joe's Father blamed Mindy and Joe because of what happened next door. Looks like the gnomes are getting their revenge.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Gnomes Are Alive!!!!!!!!!!, January 16, 1998
By A Customer
Revenge Of The Lawn gnomes is a good book but it was pretty funny when Moose and Joe went out spying on the lawn ornaments and they came alive.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Good Follow Up of the TV Show!, January 13, 1998
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This review is from: Revenge of the Lawn Gnomes (Goosebumps Presents TV Book #18) (Paperback)
Nice Book! I liked the setting and all, the gnomes were really mean, meaner then in the original book! They turned Major Mc'Call "The Major" into a lawn ornament!
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the funniest books I've ever read!!!!!!!!!, June 29, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Revenge of the Lawn Gnomes (Goosebumps Presents TV Book #18) (Paperback)
It was a very interesting book that had it's own pleasurable touch of humour.I liked the parts when Joe tells his dad of the so called ridiculous story and his father never believes a word of it. The things and the kind of mischief the lawn gnomes did also tickled me.
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3.0 out of 5 stars Quirky Entry Falls Short at Times, But Has Interesting Aspects, September 3, 2010
The "Goosebumps" book that precedes "Revenge of the Lawn Gnomes" is "The Horror at Camp Jellyjam", which is unusual for being a quirky entry in the original series (see my review on that Amazon page). Remainders of that quirkiness somewhat linger in "Revenge", which is also not the usual type of entry for R.L. Stine - here, the antagonists are lawn gnomes. The book features a lot of gardening. And an eclectic lawn scenery of a plaster deer, pink flamingoes, exotic melons, and more.

"Revenge of the Lawn Gnomes" opens with a competitive game of ping pong between sibling rivals, which is familiar when considering the nature of "Jellyjam", where two different siblings are stuck at a super-competitive sports camp. Here, Joe and Mindy Burton don't always get along, but are accustomed to another rivalry: one between their father and their militant neighbor, Bill McCall, who both grow fruits and vegetables in front of their house and compete in lawn contests. Mr. Burton has a knack for collecting strange and tacky lawn ornaments. When he brings home two plaster lawn gnomes, the kids think they're ugly...but of course, not evil.

Until the trouble begins. Mr. McCall's treasured lawn belongings, such as his casaba melons, keep getting destroyed overnight. He suspects the Burton kids and their nosy dog to be the culprits. When Joe's summer and his dog's freedom become at stake, Joe determines to find the reason behind the sudden mischief. The clues he find are disturbing. Nobody believes him, including Mindy and even his best friend Moose, which is a hallmark of "Goosebumps".

This is a weak "Goosebumps" entry because it takes a long time for any excitement to generate - especially for young readers - and even then it moves slowly at times. The last 20 pages feel rushed, and the ending is lazy - although I do find the last line (which contains the twist) to be a little cute and even funny. What I liked, however, is the fact that Stine explored new ground in trying to terrorize his young readers, and the slight quirkiness of the story gives it some appeal. In addition, the setting (which is almost entirely on neighboring lawns) is refreshing because it's not typical for a horror story. One of the creepiest, tense scenes in the book is when Joe goes to investigate in the middle of the night in the hot, sticky fog, not knowing what's exactly present.

The TV adaptation is actually favorable to the novel, which is an exception. In it, Mr. McCall lives alone (whereas he has a family in the book), and he is characterized as a strict army man - reminiscent of R. Lee Ermey - who is almost as scary as the evil lawn gnomes. The adaptation has a more favorable pace, and the gnomes' weakness is not only different this time, but more fitting, thus more effective. Also, the changed ending is very clever and chilling. I usually don't mention the TV episodes, but must recommend this one.

In summary, sparse passages about gardening are boring for a 12-year-old to read about, but Stine manages to occasionally engage by having a strong brother-sister dynamic, creating scenes of mischief, and using a pair of unlikely villains. It's a book that most "Goosebumps" fans can skip, although die-hards should check it out. And if you do, enjoy the greenery.
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3.0 out of 5 stars Leave the vegetables alone!, March 11, 2010
Joe's father loves his garden and looks forward to the annual garden show where he will show his tomatoes to win the blue ribbon. Their neighbour is equally devoted. Joe's father also loves lawn ornaments. One day he purchases 2 ugly garden gnomes.

The next day someone has destroyed most of their neighbour's melons, the ones that should've entered the garden competition. More vegetables are destroyed and Joe gets blamed. Joe decides to find out who's behind.

This was not a very good Goosebumps story. The plot was a bit too far out, and the story could've been better. The vegetables were among the most exciting part of the story.
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3.0 out of 5 stars Joe must stop the evil gnomes from ruining their garden!, February 1, 2010
Synopsis: Joe Burton's father and their next door neighbor Mr. McCall are the two best gardeners in town, and are always battling it out at the annual garden show. Joe's dog Buster loves the McCall's yard, dig holes over their lawn and snack in their vegetable garden. Needless to say, Mr. McCall doesn't like Buster at all. However, that doesn't stop Moose, Mr. McCall's son to be best friends with Joe.

One day, after spraying the plants with bug spray, Joe's father takes Joe and Mindy (Joe's sister) to 'Lawn Lovely', a store where Joe's father buys his lawn ornaments from. Joe and Mindy are embarrassed to go to that store because Joe's father buys the tackiest lawn ornaments. At the store, Joe's father sees two lawn gnomes and immediately buys them. Little does Joe realize that the gnomes are just the beginning of all his troubles.

At first, Joe seems to notice the gnome's expressions change in their faces, but no one else seems to notice it. Later, one of Mr. McCall's casaba melons are found broken, and Joe notices a seed of the melon stuck in the gnome's mouth. Later, someone paints faces on top of Mr. McCall's other lemons, and Joe notices black paint on the gnomes. Joe figures out that the gnomes are behind it, but since no one else notices it, all the blame is placed on Joe and Buster. As the gnomes continue to cause more trouble, Joe realizes that he has to stop the gnomes somehow. Can Joe try and stop the gnomes from wreaking havoc before it is too late?

Review: I don't think this book was that good, compared to others in the series. Even though there are some eerie moments towards the end of the book as Joe, Mindy and Moose try to stop the lawn gnomes, the rest of the book is pretty dull. I felt most of the book just focused on the rivalry between Joe's father and Mr. McCall's garden, and how the lawn gnomes were ruining their gardens. The book actually becomes interesting when Joe communicates with the lawn gnomes, which happens towards the end of the book.

This book would have scared me, if it had incidents such as, say the lawn gnomes came into Joe's room in the middle of the night and scared him somehow. The fact that most of the scary stuff takes place outside, where the victims are fruits and vegetables, didn't scare me at all. Another reason why this book disappointed me was because in most of the other Goosebumps book, the author always ends the story with a twist, which sends a chill down your spine. Even though this book did have a twist in the end, it seemed more ridiculous and funny rather than scary.

That is not to say that the book was completely bad. It was interesting to read what Joe did to stop the gnomes. I also enjoyed the fact that this was one of the books where Stine wrote a good brother sister relationship between Joe and Mindy (well at least better than siblings in other books). In this book, even though Joe and Mindy fight, they stick together in the end, whereas in most of the other Goosebumps books, a brother and sister almost never get along.

Unless you are a fan of the series, I would avoid reading "Revenge of the Lawn Gnomes" because it fails to scare the reader.
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