Last year, I reached out and interviewed Jim Smylie about his participation in a Goosebumps title contest held in 1994. Jim won with his title âSlime Doesnât Pay,â and was told it would be used for a new Goosebumps book written by R.L. Stine. For some reason, this never happened.
I talked to Jim about the contest and how he felt about his title never being used. I also reached out to R.L. Stine on instagram and asked why he never used âSlime Doesnât Pay.â Stine replied that he barely remembered a contest from so long ago, but admitted that was a good title and didnât know why he hadnât used it already.
Well, after nearly 30-years, it looks like Jim Smylie and his title are finally receiving their validation. Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and Blackstone Publishing are all soliciting the release of Slime Doesnât Pay by R.L. Stine on October 3rd 2023. No cover art has been shown, but a full synopsis of the book is available.

While itâs being released as its own book and not an entry in the Goosebumps franchise, this is still a huge breakthrough for the Goosebumps fandom. If Iâm free to brag, I canât help but feel a little pride at the idea I may have helped make this happen.
This isnât the first time R.L. Stine has reused a previously scrapped Goosebumps concept, so letâs discuss those other moments and look at all the other unused Goosebumps titles.
The Incredible Shrinking Fifth Grader
Goosebumps Series 2000 was notoriously cancelled after its 25th book, âThe Ghost In The Mirror,â due to legal disputes between Parachute Press and Scholastic. Itâs become common knowledge in the Goosebumps fandom that there were plans to release a 26th book, âThe Incredible Shrinking Fifth Grader.â Tim Jacobus even had the cover artwork completed in full, and shared it with the fandom a few years ago.Â

R.L. Stine confirmed that this book was retitled and released as a standalone novella called The Adventures Of Shrinkman.

The story told of a fifth grader who suddenly finds himself shrinking at an alarming rate. While the kid initially thinks itâs because he was exposed to a movie projectorâs light, later evidence indicates it was because of a strange substance he unwittingly drank.
Years later, a book with a similar premise called âNight of the Giant Everythingâ was released under Goosebumps: Hall of Horrors.
Shrinkman was one of several novellas R.L. Stine released in the interim between the end of Goosebumps Series 2000 and Goosebumps HorrorLand. Others include The 13th Warning, Zombie Town, My Alien Parents, The Three Faces Of Me, The Creatures From Beyond Beyond, and Itâs The First Day of School⊠Forever!
As a side note, Zombie Town is currently being adapted into a film.
Itâs become a serious point of discussion and investigation in the Goosebumps fandom that maybe Stineâs standalone novellas in the 2000s were all scrapped Goosebumps stories. In fact, a few were released internationally under a foreign Goosebumps banner.
Whether they were meant for Series 2000 and the possible third Triple Header collection remains unknown. Since Stineâs admitted Shrinkman started as âThe Incredible Shrinking Fifth Grader,â itâs not a farfetched idea. My Alien Parents is also speculated to be a rereleased version of Youâre Not My Parents, which Stine released in 1991 as simply âBob Stine.âÂ
âThe Incredible Shrinking Fifth Graderâsâ inclusion in The Art Of Goosebumps had a surprising bite, I mean, bit of info. Stine managed to think up the title for the 27th 2000 book, âWhen The Snake Bites,â but apparently never went beyond the title nor was any cover artwork created for it.
Goosebumps GoldÂ
Whatâs also commonly known in the Goosebumps fandom is the scrapped spin-off series Goosebumps Gold. Advertised but never released, Goosebumps Gold haunted the fandom for years thanks to a section of Tim Jacobusâ website and perpetually out-of-stock listings on book websites. Only three books are known to have been conceived for Gold. âThe Haunted Mask Lives,â âHappy Holidays From Dead House,â and âSlappy New Year.â
âThe Haunted Mask Livesâ wouldâve been the third Haunted Mask book. Jacobusâs cover art featured Carly-Beth Caldwell screaming as she rips the Haunted Mask off of her head. Amazon listed a summary about Carly-Beth being hunted after for unknown reasons by the Shopkeeper who created the Haunted Mask. The Art of Goosebumps featured concept art from Jacobus for this book, including an image of Carly-Beth pulling off her own face to reveal her skull.

âHappy Holidays From Dead Houseâ appeared to be a follow-up to the very first Goosebumps book, âWelcome To Dead House.â Yet no context or summary was ever given beyond the cover art and title clearly showing this wouldâve taken place during Christmas. Fans have wondered if this wouldâve been a prequel to the original, a direct sequel, or a completely unrelated story about the ghastly town of Dark Falls.
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âSlappy New Yearâ had almost no context or information beyond a black-and-white image of Slappy the Dummyâs face. Years later, Stine eventually used this title for Goosebumps HorrorLand. Thereâs been no indication if the story released for HorrorLand was the same one conceptualized for Gold.
Give Yourself Goosebumps #43
Thereâs currently only one book in the Give Yourself Goosebumps series which was scrapped before publication. Cover artist Craig White shared with the fandom his artwork of what wouldâve been the 43rd book. Thereâs no known title, just art of evil-looking penguins in an Arctic setting. Craig says he was given the working title, but he unfortunately doesnât remember it anymore nor does he believe the book had a synopsis. Fans have taken to simply calling this one âAttack of the Killer Penguins.âÂ

Unused Titles
Aside from âSlime Doesnât Pay,â there are more than a few titles R.L. Stine has shared with the fandom that he hasnât been able to use. In 1997, he shared with the now archived fan website The Bumps that he had three titles not attached to any books. âFeeding Frenzy,â â43 Freakout Street,â and âThe Good, The Bad, and the Very Itchy.â The following year he dropped the title âDimwits of Doomâ in another interview.
Why, even in 2022 Stine suggested the title âMorons from Marsâ but his editor said âIt would offend the morons.â
Rather bizarrely, the first three unused titles mentioned above have been used by an author named âIlyan Daffarâ over on Amazon. Daffar has self-published eight kindle stories titled Chills, with three of the books titled âFeeding Frenzy,â 43 Freakout Street,â and âThe Good, The Bad, and the Very Itchy.â All eight of Daffarâs books have protagonists whose names are just rearrangements of âIlyan.â I admit I was rather weirded out when I found these on Amazon.
On that note, Iâm glad Jim Smylieâs finally getting his promised book and that once again the power of a fandom was used for good instead of evil.