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TRS cleanup, dewicking Adult Fear


** ''Literature/HowILearnedToFly'' also counts as bizarro, in that there are no mythological monsters in it. The only supernatural thing in the book is Jack eating a strange dough that gives him the power to fly and the only thing remotely considered scary in the story is [[CelebrityIsOverrated the fact that Jack becomes famous for flying, his agent father exploiting his own son for car commercials]], and [[AdultFear government scientists try to kidnap him for experiments]].

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** ''Literature/HowILearnedToFly'' also counts as bizarro, in that there are no mythological monsters in it. The only supernatural thing in the book is Jack eating a strange dough that gives him the power to fly and the only thing remotely considered scary in the story is [[CelebrityIsOverrated the fact that Jack becomes famous for flying, his agent father exploiting his own son for car commercials]], and [[AdultFear [[TheyWouldCutYouUp government scientists try to kidnap him for experiments]].
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** The book ''I Live In Your Basement!'', due to copious amounts of MindScrew and {{gorn}}. Even the ending where the whole thing turns out to be a basement monster's dream doesn't smooth out how weird this story is.
** ''How I Learned to Fly'' also counts as bizarro, in that there are no mythological monsters in it. The only supernatural thing in the book is Jack eating a strange dough that gives him the power to fly and the only thing remotely considered scary in the story is [[CelebrityIsOverrated the fact that Jack becomes famous for flying, his agent father exploiting his own son for car commercials]], and [[AdultFear government scientists try to kidnap him for experiments]].

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** The book ''I Live In Your Basement!'', ''Literature/ILiveInYourBasement!'', due to copious amounts of MindScrew and {{gorn}}. Even the ending where the whole thing turns out to be a basement monster's dream doesn't smooth out how weird this story is.
** ''How I Learned to Fly'' ''Literature/HowILearnedToFly'' also counts as bizarro, in that there are no mythological monsters in it. The only supernatural thing in the book is Jack eating a strange dough that gives him the power to fly and the only thing remotely considered scary in the story is [[CelebrityIsOverrated the fact that Jack becomes famous for flying, his agent father exploiting his own son for car commercials]], and [[AdultFear government scientists try to kidnap him for experiments]].
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Removed YMMV pothole


* Shusaku Endo's short story anthology ''Stained Glass Elegies'' consists of deadly serious examinations of Catholic faith in everyday life...and an [[RefugeInAudacity over-the-top]], [[SugarWiki/FunnyMoments sidesplitting]] parody of ''{{Fantastic Voyage|Plot}}''. It was apparently the only comedy story Endo ever wrote, which makes the transition from thoughtful treatises to [[{{Squick}} enema jokes]] all the more jarring.

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* Shusaku Endo's short story anthology ''Stained Glass Elegies'' consists of deadly serious examinations of Catholic faith in everyday life...and an [[RefugeInAudacity over-the-top]], [[SugarWiki/FunnyMoments sidesplitting]] sidesplitting parody of ''{{Fantastic Voyage|Plot}}''. It was apparently the only comedy story Endo ever wrote, which makes the transition from thoughtful treatises to [[{{Squick}} enema jokes]] all the more jarring.
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None


** The book ''I Live In Your Basement!'', due to copious amounts of mindfuckery and {{gorn}}. Even the ending where the whole thing turns out to be a basement monster's dream doesn't smooth out how weird this story is.
** "How I Learned to Fly" also counts as bizarro, in that there are no mythological monsters in it. The only supernatural thing in the book is Jack eating a strange dough that gives him the power to fly and the only thing remotely considered scary in the story is [[CelebrityIsOverrated the fact that Jack becomes famous for flying, his agent father exploiting his own son for car commercials]], and [[AdultFear government scientists try to kidnap him for experiments]].

to:

** The book ''I Live In Your Basement!'', due to copious amounts of mindfuckery MindScrew and {{gorn}}. Even the ending where the whole thing turns out to be a basement monster's dream doesn't smooth out how weird this story is.
** "How ''How I Learned to Fly" Fly'' also counts as bizarro, in that there are no mythological monsters in it. The only supernatural thing in the book is Jack eating a strange dough that gives him the power to fly and the only thing remotely considered scary in the story is [[CelebrityIsOverrated the fact that Jack becomes famous for flying, his agent father exploiting his own son for car commercials]], and [[AdultFear government scientists try to kidnap him for experiments]].
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* Shusaku Endo's short story anthology ''Stained Glass Elegies'' consists of deadly serious examinations of Catholic faith in everyday life...and an [[RefugeInAudacity over-the-top]], [[CrowningMomentOfFunny sidesplitting]] parody of ''{{Fantastic Voyage|Plot}}''. It was apparently the only comedy story Endo ever wrote, which makes the transition from thoughtful treatises to [[{{Squick}} enema jokes]] all the more jarring.

to:

* Shusaku Endo's short story anthology ''Stained Glass Elegies'' consists of deadly serious examinations of Catholic faith in everyday life...and an [[RefugeInAudacity over-the-top]], [[CrowningMomentOfFunny [[SugarWiki/FunnyMoments sidesplitting]] parody of ''{{Fantastic Voyage|Plot}}''. It was apparently the only comedy story Endo ever wrote, which makes the transition from thoughtful treatises to [[{{Squick}} enema jokes]] all the more jarring.
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Moved from Bizarro Episode

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* ''Dexter in the Dark'', the third ''Series/{{Dexter}}'' novel, shifted the series from crime thriller to supernatural horror, revealing the reason Dexter kills is because the spawn of an EldritchAbomination (which comes complete with its own cult) has taken him as its host. The later novels make only minor references to these events, if that.
* While plot and symbolism are often integrated in ''Literature/TheDivineComedy'', ''Purgatorio'' Canto 29 and 32 both stop Dante's travels in their place to have him witness a series of strange events with no bearing on the rest of his journey. The only significance of this events are as symbolic tellings of the history of the Church, but this is the only place in which symbolism occurs with no parallel plot advancement.
* The third story in ''Flashman and the Tiger'', where [[Literature/{{Flashman}} the title character]] runs into Franchise/SherlockHolmes, Watson and their antagonist Sebastian "Tiger" Moran. For a series otherwise confined to real historical events, it's a jarring entry that's considered divisive among ''Flashman'' fans.
* ''Literature/{{Goosebumps}}''
** The book ''I Live In Your Basement!'', due to copious amounts of mindfuckery and {{gorn}}. Even the ending where the whole thing turns out to be a basement monster's dream doesn't smooth out how weird this story is.
** "How I Learned to Fly" also counts as bizarro, in that there are no mythological monsters in it. The only supernatural thing in the book is Jack eating a strange dough that gives him the power to fly and the only thing remotely considered scary in the story is [[CelebrityIsOverrated the fact that Jack becomes famous for flying, his agent father exploiting his own son for car commercials]], and [[AdultFear government scientists try to kidnap him for experiments]].
* The ''Literature/{{Mog}}'' book "Mog and the Granny" is kind of a normal ''Mog'' book: the title cat's owners visit America while she stays with Debbie and Nicky's granny. However, it has a subplot where Mog has PsychicPowers: she always knows where Debbie is. This ability has never been stated before or since.
* ''Literature/{{Relativity}}'' has at least two:
** "Legend of the Cheese Maidens", which [[WordOfGod the authors admit]] was originally intended to be a non-canon erotic story that went off the rails, ''starts'' in the bedroom of two of the heroes (a married couple) talking about their sexual turn-ons, but then devolves into a peculiar story involving cheerleaders, space aliens, and urban legends.
** "Lady Luck" is about a pair of thieves who take their pet goldfish, in a bowl, with them on a bank robbery because they believe it will bring them good luck.
* Shusaku Endo's short story anthology ''Stained Glass Elegies'' consists of deadly serious examinations of Catholic faith in everyday life...and an [[RefugeInAudacity over-the-top]], [[CrowningMomentOfFunny sidesplitting]] parody of ''{{Fantastic Voyage|Plot}}''. It was apparently the only comedy story Endo ever wrote, which makes the transition from thoughtful treatises to [[{{Squick}} enema jokes]] all the more jarring.
* The ''[[Literature/SweetValleyHigh Sweet Valley Twins: The Magic Christmas]]'', a book best described as [[JustForFun/XMeetsY "Elizabeth and Jessica go to Narnia."]] Even in a series that [[MaybeMagicMaybeMundane occasionally acknowledged the existence of the supernatural]], this one was weird.
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