After an eight-year absence, Scholastic announced their plan to release three new titles in May 2013, with more to follow later in the year.
Literary criticism
While the Point Horror series did not attract much serious attention, British children's novelist and literary historian
Gillian Avery noted the series was "invariably structured around oppositions" in that teen horror novels "does not 'put an end to the opposition between the real and the imaginary' but, instead, affirms the distinction".[4]Roy Fisher wrote the series embodied and represented "the fears and anxieties of young people about their lives in general and about school in particular".[5] Others noted the series' similarity to
Stephen King, saying that there "was little difference between the approach and design...other than length".[6]
Will Davis of The Guardian attributed the decline of the series to higher standards from teen readers and the series' lack of real-life issues.[7]
The series has received negative criticism for its portrayal of female characters. British educational historian
Mary Hilton wrote in her book Potent Fictions: Children's Literacy and the Challenge of Popular Culture (Routledge, 1996) many young readers viewed the female characters as the ones who get "upset, killed, or dumped".[8]
Offshoots
There have been three offshoots of the Point Horror series that, while all showing the "Point Horror" Logo, are often regarded as separate series in their own rights. They are Point Horror Unleashed, Nightmare Hall and Mutant Point Horror. Nightmare Hall is unique amongst the offshoots as the entire series was written solely by
Diane Hoh.
Television
In November 2019, it was announced that Point Horror would be adapted into an
anthology series for
HBO Max.[9]
After an eight-year absence, Scholastic announced their plan to release three new titles in May 2013, with more to follow later in the year.
Literary criticism
While the Point Horror series did not attract much serious attention, British children's novelist and literary historian
Gillian Avery noted the series was "invariably structured around oppositions" in that teen horror novels "does not 'put an end to the opposition between the real and the imaginary' but, instead, affirms the distinction".[4]Roy Fisher wrote the series embodied and represented "the fears and anxieties of young people about their lives in general and about school in particular".[5] Others noted the series' similarity to
Stephen King, saying that there "was little difference between the approach and design...other than length".[6]
Will Davis of The Guardian attributed the decline of the series to higher standards from teen readers and the series' lack of real-life issues.[7]
The series has received negative criticism for its portrayal of female characters. British educational historian
Mary Hilton wrote in her book Potent Fictions: Children's Literacy and the Challenge of Popular Culture (Routledge, 1996) many young readers viewed the female characters as the ones who get "upset, killed, or dumped".[8]
Offshoots
There have been three offshoots of the Point Horror series that, while all showing the "Point Horror" Logo, are often regarded as separate series in their own rights. They are Point Horror Unleashed, Nightmare Hall and Mutant Point Horror. Nightmare Hall is unique amongst the offshoots as the entire series was written solely by
Diane Hoh.
Television
In November 2019, it was announced that Point Horror would be adapted into an
anthology series for
HBO Max.[9]