After hundreds of Goosebumps books and several iterations of the series, coming up with fresh material had to be a challenge, but R.L. Stine does pretty well. Goosebumps first took to the ocean in Deep Trouble, a classic of the original series, and we revisit that setting for Attack of the Jack with Violet and Shawn Packer (ages twelve and ten), siblings sent to stay with their Uncle Jim while their parents travel on business. Violet and her brother have never met Jim, but the seaside atmosphere seems ripe for adventure in the New England town where he lives. Jim is a quirky old lighthouse keeper who lives alone with his black cat, Celeste, but he's relatively friendly toward the two kids who will spend the next few weeks at his home. Living on the seashore could be fun.
Uncle Jim's household is far from normal, however. Violet and Shawn are stunned when Celeste speaks English to them, in a raspy cat voice. Jim shrugs it off, explaining that Celeste's former owner was an old friend who was in a shipwreck and drifted for two years at sea with Celeste. To stave off madness, he taught his cat to talk. Jim encourages Violet and Shawn to have the run of the house, but warns them not to enter one particular locked door. They disobey this directive the first time they're home alone, and inside the door find a treasure chest full of jack-in-the-boxes. The boxes hold strange figurines dressed like pirates, but when Shawn opens the wrong box, a nasty buccaneer who calls himself Jack the Knife pops out, grows to life-size, and seizes the kids. Uncle Jim is also Jack's prisoner, and to free him and send Jack and his pirate crew back where they came from, Violet and Shawn must complete a journey that will endanger their lives every step of the way. Is there hope for success...or are our protagonists embarking on a fool's errand?
Other than the ocean setting, Attack of the Jack bears little resemblance to Deep Trouble. This book doesn't have the spine-tingling plot surprises that made Deep Trouble a premier addition to the Goosebumps canon. Attack of the Jack revels in the silliness of its characters and doesn't mind if the story lacks logic. The chapters are also longer than usual for Goosebumps. This isn't one of my favorite R.L. Stine books, but I'm sure it has its audience. Slappy the ventriloquist dummy returns as a main character for book three of the SlappyWorld series, I Am Slappy's Evil Twin, and I look forward to it.