Return of the Mummy
by R.L. Stine · Goosebumps #23
A classic mummy adventure — scary enough to thrill, short enough to finish in one sitting
The story
Gabe travels to Egypt where his archaeologist uncle is excavating near the ancient pyramids. When he learns of an ancient chant rumored to animate mummies, he has to decide whether ancient legends are superstition — or something far more dangerous.
Age verdict
Best for ages 8-10; accessible to brave 7-year-olds and fun for series completionists up to 12.
Our take
Entertainment-first horror gateway: excels at hooking reluctant readers, thinner on literary and moral depth
What stands out
Each audience's top 3 dimensions. Out of 30 scored per book.
Kids love
- Middle momentum Strong
Off the Hook — Nearly every chapter ends on unresolved tension (excavation deepens, strange sounds emerge, new threat revealed); reader cannot find clean stopping point. Architecture matches the fresh set-piece momentum mechanic exactly.
- First-chapter grab Strong
Comparable to All the Broken Pieces — Gabe's nervous flight to Egypt establishes emotional stakes through mystery and fear, similar to opening verse poetry that grounds emotional gravity. Opening hook creates genuine curiosity, but less immediate action-forward than Lunch Lady benchmark.
Parents love
- Reading gateway Exceptional
Comparable to Lunch Lady and the Cyborg Substitute — 118 pages, short chapters, relentless hooks, horror stakes that make every chapter ending feel urgent. Goosebumps is the gateway series archetype; children who claim to hate reading routinely finish in a single evening.
- Creative spark Solid
Something Wonky This Way Comes — Ancient-curse mythology and mummy-animation mechanics inspire kids to invent their own curses and monsters. Egypt setting prompts "what if I found a secret tomb?" scenarios that fuel creative writing and storytelling.
Teachers love
- Reluctant reader rescue Exceptional
short enough to finish in one evening, scary enough to feel like a dare, simple enough that a struggling reader is never left behind. Mummy installment adds particularly strong genre hook.
- Read-aloud power Strong
Comparable to Earthquake in the Early Morning — Short chapters fit class periods perfectly; performable character voices (Uncle Ben's jokey warmth, Sari's competitive snark, mysterious reporter's menacing calm) are distinct and entertaining. Cliffhanger chapter endings make students beg for one more—strong classroom read-aloud.
✓ Perfect for
- • kids who love ancient Egypt and mysteries
- • reluctant readers who need a short, gripping book they can actually finish
- • children starting the Goosebumps series or returning for more
- • classroom Egypt units looking for an engaging fiction complement
Not ideal for
Readers who startle easily at supernatural imagery or have arachnophobia — the spider descriptions are vivid, and the mummy is rendered with some creepy physical detail.
⚠ Heads up
At a glance
- Pages
- 118
- Chapters
- 21
- Words
- 29k
- Lexile
- 560L
- Difficulty
- Easy
- POV
- First Person
- Illustration
- None
- Published
- 1994
- Publisher
- Scholastic
- ISBN
- 9781407160986
Mood & style
You'll know it worked when…
When a kid can't put it down past bedtime, they're in the target sweet spot.
If your kid loved "Return of the Mummy"
Matched across 30 dimensions — interest hooks, character appeal, tone, pacing, emotional core. Not by what other people bought. By what fits the same reader profile.
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