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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/coville_2713.jpg]]
2Bruce Farrington Coville (born May 16, 1950) is an American author of the baby boomer generation known for his YoungAdult, [[MiddleGradeLiterature Middle Grade]], and ChildrensLiterature. He tends to write in the SpeculativeFiction genre, occasionally dipping into horror, although generally of the [[DefangedHorrors kid-friendly variety]].
3
4Compare Creator/RLStine and Creator/KAApplegate.
5
6[[https://brucecoville.com His official website is here.]]
7
8----
9!! His over 100 works include:
10[[foldercontrol]]
11
12[[folder:Series by Bruce Coville:]]
13%% Listed in chronological order by the first book in each series.
14
15!!''Bruce Coville's Chamber of Horrors''
16Four standalone horror stories originally published in the teen horror series ''Dark Forces'' and ''Twilight: Where Darkness Begins'', they were reprinted in 1996 as a single series.\
17
18* ''Amulet of Doom'' (1985 in ''Twilight: Where Darkness Begins'' series; reprinted 1996; reissued 2023 as ''Never Trust a Demon'')
19* ''Spirits and Spells'' (1986 in ''Twilight: Where Darkness Begins'' series; reprinted 1996)
20* ''Eyes of the Tarot'' (1983 in ''Dark Forces'' series; reprinted 1996)
21* ''Waiting Spirit'' (1984 in ''Dark Forces'' series; reprinted 1996)
22----
23!!''[[Literature/TheAIGang The A.I. Gang]]''
24Five genius kids -- Rachel and Roger Phillips, Ray "Gamma Ray" Gammand, Tripton "Trip" Duncan Delmar Davis, and Wendy "Wonderchild" Wendell III -- have been dragged off to a remote island so their scientist parents can work on the ultimate computer project: creating a machine that can truly think. Upon discovering this, the kids decide to beat their parents at their own game. Joined by Hap Swenson, whose father runs the island's motor pool, they soon discover the project and its scientists are being targeted by multiple organizations, each with their own goals. [[labelnote:Note]]''The A.I. Gang'' was originally co-written with Jim Lawrence as part of a "package series", with Lawrence writing books 2 and 3, and Coville writing books 1 and 4. However, Coville wound up taking over book 3 at the publisher's request when Lawrence fell behind on the work. After the series went out of print, Coville bought back the rights to his three books, rewrote them from the ground up, and republished them in this new form, writing around ''The Cutlass Clue'' since it hadn't done much to advance the plot.[[/labelnote]]\
25
26* ''Operation Sherlock'' (1986, revised 1995)
27* ''The Cutlass Clue'' (1986; by Jim Lawrence)
28* ''Robot Trouble'' (1986, revised 1995)
29* ''Forever Begins Tomorrow'' (1986, revised 1995).
30----
31!!''Literature/NinaTanleven''
32Nina "Nine" Tanleven and her friend Chris Gurley find themselves solving a series of mysteries involving ghosts and hauntings when they discover a ghost in a theater in their hometown of Syracuse, New York.\
33
34* ''The Ghost in the Third Row'' (1987)
35* ''The Ghost Wore Gray'' (1988)
36* "The Ghost Let Go" (1995, short story[[note]]Collected in ''Bruce Coville's Book of Ghosts'' and ''Oddest of All''; the author's notes in ''Oddest of All'' place it between books 2 and 3 of the series.[[/note]])
37* ''The Ghost in the Big Brass Bed'' (1990)
38----
39!!''Literature/CampHauntedHills''
40When Stuart Glassman discovers his favorite movie director has opened a summer camp for kids who want to learn how to make movies, he immediately signs up. Little does he expect that by summer's end, he'll have been kidnapped by a sasquatch, chased by a mummy, and menaced by a room full of monsters.\
41
42* ''How I Survived My Summer Vacation'' (1988)
43* ''Some of My Best Friends Are Monsters'' (1989)
44* ''The Dinosaur that Followed Me Home'' (1990)
45----
46!!''Literature/MagicShop''
47When young preteens stumble into S.H. Elives' magic shop, each winds up taking home a special item that will change their lives forever.[[note]]Part of the continuity that also includes ''The Foolish Giant'', the ''Goblins'' duology, ''The Dragonslayers'', ''The Unicorn Chronicles'' series and a handful of short stories.[[/note]]\
48
49* ''The Monster's Ring'' (1989; revised 2002)
50* ''Jeremy Thatcher, Dragon Hatcher'' (1990)
51* ''Jennifer Murdley's Toad'' (1993)
52* "Watch Out!" (1996, short story)
53* "The Metamorphosis of Justin Jones" (1997; short story)
54* ''The Skull Of Truth'' (1999)
55* ''Juliet Dove Queen Of Love'' (2003)
56* "The Mask of Eamonn Tiyado" (2008; short story)
57----
58!!''Literature/MyTeacherIsAnAlien''
59A series that starts out about WeNeedToGetProof, but halfway through, turns into a series about HumanityOnTrial.\
60
61* ''My Teacher Is An Alien'' (1990)
62* ''My Teacher Fried My Brains'' (1991)
63* ''My Teacher Glows In The Dark'' (1991)
64* ''My Teacher Flunked The Planet'' (1992)
65----
66!!''Literature/SpaceBrat''
67Blork is the biggest brat on the planet Splat. But one day, he and his pet Poodnoobie Lunk wind up embroiled in an adventure that will change his outlook on life for the better.\
68
69* ''Space Brat'' (1992)
70* ''Space Brat 2: Blork's Evil Twin'' (1993)
71* ''Space Brat 3: The Wrath of Squat'' (1994)
72* ''Space Brat 4: Planet of the Dips'' (1995)
73* ''Space Brat 5: The Saber-Toothed Poodnoobie'' (1997)
74----
75!!''[[Literature/GoblinsInTheCastle Goblins]]'' duology
76William has lived in Toad-in-a-Cage Castle his entire life. But one night, he discovers the strange secret in the north tower, leading him into a dangerous quest to rescue a friend from the land of the goblins. Book 2 continues the story from the point of view of William's friend Fauna, and reveals both their origins, as well as that of the enormous stone toad that gave the castle its name.[[note]]Part of the continuity that also includes the ''The Foolish Giant'', ''The Dragonslayers'', ''The Unicorn Chronicles'' series, the ''Magic Shop'' series and a handful of short stories.[[/note]]\
77
78* ''Goblins in the Castle'' (1992)
79* ''Goblins on the Prowl'' (2015)
80----
81!!''Literature/RodAllbrightAlienAdventures''
82Rod Allbright believes he's a relatively normal sixth-grader… until a tiny spaceship and its occupants crashes through his window and enlist his aid in arresting an intergalactic criminal, who must be stopped before he completes a plan that will lead to the destruction of the entire universe.\
83
84* ''Aliens Ate My Homework'' (1993)
85* ''I Left My Sneakers in Dimension X'' (1994)
86* ''The Search for Snout''/''Aliens Stole My Dad'' (1995)
87* ''Aliens Stole My Body'' (1998)
88----
89!!''Literature/TheUnicornChronicles''
90Young Cara finds herself embroiled in an unexpected adventure when she enters the magical land of Luster, home of the unicorns and other beings, and encounters the Hunters seeking to destroy them.[[note]]Part of the continuity that also includes ''The Foolish Giant'', the ''Goblins'' duology, ''The Dragonslayers'', the ''Magic Shop'' series and a handful of short stories.[[/note]] A revised and reissued edition was released in 2018-2022.\
91
92* Original version:
93** Book I: ''Into the Land of the Unicorns'' (1994)
94** Book II: ''Song of the Wanderer'' (1999)
95** Book III: ''Dark Whispers'' (2008)
96** Book IV: ''The Last Hunt'' (2010)\
97
98* Revised version:
99** Book I: ''Into the Land of the Unicorns'' (2018)
100** Book II: ''Song of the Wanderer'' (2019)
101** Book III: ''Enter the Whisperer'' (2020)
102** Book IV: ''Secret of the Delvers'' (2021)
103** Book V: ''The Invasion of Luster'' (2022)
104** Book VI: ''The Wounded Tree'' (2022)
105** Book VII: ''The Gathered Glory'' (2022)
106
107----
108!!Shakespeare retellings
109Adaptations of the classic Shakespeare plays, incorporating essential lines from each of them into a prose style.\
110
111* ''The Tempest'' (1996)
112* ''A Midsummer Night's Dream'' (1996)
113* ''Macbeth'' (1997)
114* ''Romeo and Juliet'' (1999)
115* ''Twelfth Night'' (2003)
116* ''Hamlet'' (2004)
117* ''The Winter's Tale'' (2007)
118----
119!!''I Was a Sixth Grade Alien'' (''My Best Friend Is an Alien'' in some countries)
120Earth has made contact with another world, and its ambassador insists that his son, Pleskit Meenom, be treated like a normal Earth kid. That means enrolling him in sixth grade, where he and his new best friend Tim Tompkins get into all kinds of wild adventures.\
121
122# ''I Was a Sixth Grade Alien'' (1999)
123# ''The Attack of the Two-Inch Teacher'' (1999)
124# ''I Lost My Grandfather's Brain'' (1999)
125# ''Peanut Butter Lover Boy'' (2000)
126# ''Zombies of the Science Fair'' (2000)
127# ''Don't Fry My Veeblax!'' (2000)
128# ''Too Many Aliens'' (2000)
129# ''Snatched From Earth'' (2000)
130# ''There's an Alien in My Backpack'' (2000)
131# ''The Revolt of the Miniature Mutants'' (2001)
132# ''There's an Alien in My Underwear'' (2001)
133# ''Farewell to Earth'' (2001)
134* "Disaster on Geembol Seven" (1999-2000)[[note]]A serial adventure set pre-series and included as a bonus feature in books 1-6.[[/note]]
135
136----
137!!''Literature/MoongobbleAndMe''
138A young boy named Edward finds himself having adventures with the wizard Moongobble.\
139
140* ''The Dragon of Doom'' (2003)
141* ''The Weeping Werewolf'' (2004)
142* ''The Evil Elves'' (2004)
143* ''The Mischief Monster'' (2007)
144* ''The Naughty Nork'' (2009)
145----
146!!''Literature/AmberBrown''
147A revival of the series begun by Creator/PaulaDanziger, co-written by Coville and Elizabeth Levy after Danziger's death.\
148
149* ''Amber Brown is Tickled Pink'' (2012)
150* ''Amber Brown Is on the Move'' (2013)
151* ''Amber Brown Horses Around'' (2014)
152----
153!!''Literature/TheEnchantedFiles''
154A humor/fantasy series where the events of each book are told through diary entries and other documents.\
155
156* ''Diary of a Mad Brownie''/''Cursed'' (2015)
157* ''Diary of a Runaway Griffin''/''Hatched'' (2016)
158* ''Diary of a Terrible Troll''/''Trolled'' (2017)
159----
160[[/folder]]
161
162[[folder:Standalones by Bruce Coville:]]
163* ''Space Station Ice-3'' (1987 as ''Murder in Orbit''; reissued in 1996)[[note]]Originally the second in the ''Omni Odysseys'' series, a package series of three unrelated science fiction stories -- the other two were ''Astro Pilots'' (1987), by Laura J. Mixon; and ''Skyborn'' (1988), by Marcia H. Kruchten.[[/note]]
164* ''Literature/MonsterOfTheYear'' (1990)
165* ''Literature/TheDragonslayers'' (1994)[[note]]Part of the continuity that also includes the ''Goblins'' duology, ''The Foolish Giant'', ''The Unicorn Chronicles'' series, the ''Magic Shop'' series and a handful of short stories.[[/note]]
166* ''Fortune's Journey'' (1994) -- a historical fiction story, set in 1853.
167* ''The World's Worst Fairy Godmother'' (1996)
168* ''Literature/ArmageddonSummer'' (1998; collaboration with Creator/JaneYolen)
169* ''Literature/TheMonstersOfMorleyManor'' (2001)[[note]]Revised and collected version of the serial novel of the same name, originally released in books 7-11 of the ''Literature/BruceCovillesBookOf'' series.[[/note]]
170* ''Thor's Wedding Day'' (2005)[[note]]Novel-length retelling of the myth of Thor and Thrym, the giant who stole Thor's hammer and wanted to marry the goddess Freya.[[/note]]
171* ''Always October'' (2012) -- his 100th book published.[[note]]Revised and expanded version of "My Little Brother is a Monster", from ''Bruce Coville's Book of Monsters'' (1993).[[/note]]
172* ''The Thief of Worlds'' (2021)
173[[/folder]]
174
175[[folder:Picture books by Bruce Coville:]]
176* ''The Foolish Giant'' (1978) -- Coville's very first book to be published. [[note]]Part of the continuity that also includes the ''Goblins'' duology, ''The Dragonslayers'', ''The Unicorn Chronicles'' series, the ''Magic Shop'' series and a handful of short stories.[[/note]]
177* ''Sarah's Unicorn'' (1985)
178* ''Sarah and the Dragon'' (1987) (sequel to ''Sarah's Unicorn'')
179* ''My Grandfather's House'' (1996)
180* ''The Lapsnatcher'' (1997)
181* ''The Prince of Butterflies'' (2002)
182* ''Hans Brinker'' (2007, retelling)
183[[/folder]]
184
185[[folder:Anthologies by Bruce Coville:]]
186
187!!''Literature/BruceCovillesBookOf''
188Themed anthologies with introductions and an opening story by Bruce Coville, and occasionally one or two more of his snuck in among the other entries. Books 7-11 include the five-part story ''Literature/TheMonstersOfMorleyManor'', which would be expanded and revised into the book of the same name.\
189
190* ''Bruce Coville's Book of Monsters'' (1993)
191* ''Bruce Coville's Book of Aliens'' (1994)
192* ''Bruce Coville's Book of Ghosts'' (1995)
193* ''Bruce Coville's Book of Nightmares'' (1995)
194* ''Bruce Coville's Book of Spine Tinglers'' (1996)
195* ''Bruce Coville's Book of Magic'' (1996)
196* ''Bruce Coville's Book of Monsters II'' (1996)
197* ''Bruce Coville's Book of Aliens II'' (1996)
198* ''Bruce Coville's Book of Ghosts II'' (1997)
199* ''Bruce Coville's Book of Nightmares II'' (1997)
200* ''Bruce Coville's Book of Spine Tinglers II'' (1997)
201* ''Bruce Coville's Book of Magic II'' (1997)
202
203----
204!!''Bruce Coville's...''
205Themed anthologies. Unlike his previous "Book of…" series, these do not usually include any stories by Coville himself, and he does not count them in his formal list of books.\
206
207* ''Bruce Coville's Shapeshifters'' (1999)[[labelnote:Contents]]"Homeward Bound" (1988), by Bruce Coville; "I Was a Bestselling Teenage Werewolf" (1999), by Lawrence Watt-Evans; "Myself" (1999), by Mark A. Garland; "Frog Princes" (1999), by Janni Lee Simner; "Tricky Coyote" (1999), by Susan J. Kroupa; "Swan Sister" (1996), by Anne Mazer; "The Changelings" (1995), by Jessica Amanda Salmonson; "The Talking Sword" (1998), by Jack Dann; "Freedom" (1999), by Connie Wilkins; "Fever Dream" (1948), by Ray Bradbury; "The Electronic Werewolf" (1999), by Lael Littke and Lori Littke Silfen; "Wilding" (1995), by Jane Yolen; "Jonas. Just Jonas" (1999), by Nancy Varian Berberick and Greg [=LaBarbera=]; "A Million Copies in Print" (1999), by John C. Bunnell[[/labelnote]]
208* ''Bruce Coville's Alien Visitors'' (1999)[[labelnote:Contents]]"The Little Finger of the Left Hand" (1999), by Mel Gilden; "Alien Ground" (1999), by Lois Tilton; "Zoo" (1958), by Edward D. Hoch; "Fashion Victim" (1999), by Esther M. Friesner; "Sconce" (1999), by Carol Ottoleghi-Barga; "Childhood's Confession" (1990), by Lou Grinzo; "Very Smart" (1999), by Marc Bilgrey; "Finding the Way" (1999), by Sherwood Smith; "Jilly" (1999), by Deborah J. Ross as Deborah Wheeler; "Why I Left Harry's All-Night Hamburgers" (1987), by Lawrence Watt-Evans; "Deborah's Choice" (1999), by Alethea Eason; "Dark They Were, and Golden-Eyed" (1949), by Ray Bradbury; "Ambassador from Earth" (1999), by Mari Eckstein Gower; "In Our Hands" (1999), by Bruce Coville[[/labelnote]]
209* ''Bruce Coville's Strange Worlds'' (2000)[[labelnote:Contents]]"A Walk in the Dark" (1950), by Arthur C. Clarke; "Healer", by Connie Wilkins; "2064, or Thereabouts" (1964, part of the "Moderan" series), by David R. Bunch; "The Looking Glass", by Alethea Eason; "Free Will", by John C. Bunnell; "Egg Shells", by Nina Kiriki Hoffman; "Cockfight" (1980, part of the "Pit Dragon" series), by Jane Yolen; "Hello, Darling" (1996), by Anne Mazer; "Trading Places", by Noreen Doyle; "The Sea Turned Upside Down", by Gus Grenfell; "Whooo-ooo, Flupper!" (1987), by Nicholas Fisk; "The Dead Planet" (1946), by Edmond Hamilton; "Fun on Phrominium", by Karen Jordan Allen; "Sweet Home", by Nancy Varian Berberick[[/labelnote]]
210* ''Bruce Coville's [=UFO=]s'' (2000)[[labelnote:Contents]]"Shadow of the Pyramid" (2000), by Noreen Doyle; "A Lot of Saucers" (2000), by Harlan Ellison; "The Toy Room" (2000), by David M. Honigsberg; "Night of the Ball" (2000), by Greg [=LaBarbera=]; "Spirits from the Vasty Deep" (1986, from the Kedrigern series), by John Morressy; "Field Trip" (2000), by Gordon Linzner; "The Boy, the Dog and the Spaceship" (1974), by Nicholas Fisk; "Fireflies" (2000), by Nancy Etchemendy; "Overseer" (2000), by Al Sarrantonio; "Snnslt Gyrlhpt" (2000), by Michael Markiewicz; "Mister Big" (2000), by Mark A. Garland; "Dragon Reserve, Home Eight" (1984), by Diana Wynne Jones; "Buried Treasure" (2000), by Tim Waggoner[[/labelnote]]
211
212----
213!!''[[Literature/OddlyEnough Oddities]]''
214Anthology series containing a mix of previously published and brand new stories exclusively by Coville. Each contains nine stories and an essay; the series also collects five of Coville's introductory stories from the ''Literature/BruceCovillesBookOf'' series (excluding "My Little Brother is a Monster", "Wizard's Boy" and the five portions of "The Monsters of Morley Manor").\
215
216* ''Oddly Enough'' (1994)[[labelnote:Contents]]"The Box" (1986); "Duffy's Jacket" (1989); "Homeward Bound" (1988); "With His Head Tucked Underneath His Arm" (1993); "Clean as a Whistle" (1994); "The Language of Blood" (1994); "Old Glory" (1991); "The Passing of the Pack" (1988); "A Blaze of Glory" (1994)[[/labelnote]]
217* ''Odder Than Ever'' (1999)[[labelnote:Contents]]"The Golden Sail" (1999; original to collection); "Biscuits of Glory" (1995); "I, Earthling" (1994); "The Giant's Tooth" (1999; original to collection); "There's Nothing Under the Bed" (1995); "The Stinky Princess" (1999; original to collection); "The Japanese Mirror" (1996); "Am I Blue?" (1994); "The Metamorphosis of Justin Jones" (1997)[[/labelnote]]
218* ''Odds Are Good'' (2006; omnibus of the first two books)
219* ''Oddest of All'' (2008)[[labelnote:Contents]]"In Our Own Hands" (1999; variant of "In Our Hands" from "Bruce Coville's Alien Visitors"); "What's the Worst That Could Happen?" (2003); "The Ghost Let Go" (1994); "In the Frog King's Court" (2000); "The Thing in Auntie Alma's Pond" (1996); "The Hardest, Kindest Gift" (2001); "The Mask of Eamonn Tiyado" (2008; original to collection); "Herbert Hutchison in the Underworld" (2008; original to collection); "The Boy With Silver Eyes" (2008; original to collection)[[/labelnote]]
220
221----
222!!Other anthologies
223
224* ''The Unicorn Treasury'' (1988)[[labelnote:Contents]]"The Unicorn in the Maze" (1988), by Robin Hobb (writing as Megan Lindholm); "Unicorn" (1957), by William Jay Smith; "A Net to Catch the Wind" (1979), by Margaret Greaves; "Riddle" (1988), by Myra Cohn Livingston; "The Valley of the Unicorns" (excerpt from ''Literature/ASwiftlyTiltingPlanet'') (1987), by Madeleine L'Engle; "Ragged John" (1988), by Bruce Coville (writing as Beatrice Farrington); "Homeward Bound" (1988), by Bruce Coville; "The Paint Box" (1961), by E. V. Rieu; "The Transfigured Hart (excerpt)" (1975), by Creator/JaneYolen; "The Unicorn" (1939), by Ella Young; "The Snow White Pony" (1988), by Ardath Mayhar; "What News the Eagle Brought" (excerpt from "Literature/TheLastBattle") (1956), by C. S. Lewis; "Unicorn" (1963), by Nicholas Stuart Gray; "[[Literature/EnchantedForestChronicles The Princess, the Cat, and the Unicorn]]" (1988), by Patricia C. Wrede; "Starhorn" (1988), by Shirley Rousseau Murphy; "The Court of the Summer King" (1988), by Jennifer Roberson; "The Strangers" (1947), by Audrey Alexandra Brown; and "The Boy Who Drew Unicorns" (1988), by Jane Yolen.[[/labelnote]]
225* ''Herds of Thunder, Manes of Gold'' (1989)[[labelnote:Contents]]"My Horse", by William Shakespeare; "Flight of the Swan", by Marian Flandrick Bray; "Birth of the King", by Marguerite Henry; "White Horse Girl and the Blue Wind Boy", by Carl Sandburg; "Prairie Lightning", by Peter G. Roop; "Dawn Horse", by Jane Yolen; "White Horse", by Anne Eliot Crompton; "Taming of Bucephalus", retold by Bruce Coville; "Joe Green Grows Up", by Anna Sewell; "Barn Gravity", by Nancy Springer; "Orchard", by Ruth Stone; "Winged Horse", by Nathaniel Hawthorne; "My Friend Flicka", by Mary O'Hara; "Dear Pony", by Shirley Rousseau Murphy; "Sunrise", by Mary Stanton; "Dapplegrim", retold by Bruce Coville; "To Ride the Sea of Grass", by Jennifer Roberson. [[/labelnote]]
226* ''A Glory of Unicorns'' (1998)[[labelnote:Contents]]"The Guardian of Memory" (1998), by Bruce Coville; "Tearing Down the Unicorns" (1998), by Janni Lee Simner; "Beyond the Fringe" (1998), by Gregory Maguire; "Stealing Dreams" (1998), by Ruth O'Neill; "The Dream-Child" (1998), by Nancy Varian Berberick; "The Ugly Unicorn" (1991), by Jessica Amanda Salmonson; "Story Hour" (1998), by Katherine Coville; "The Unicorns of Kabustan" (1998), by Alethea Eason; "A Song for Croaker Nordge" (1998), by Nancy Varian Berberick and Greg [=LaBarbera=]; "The Healing Truth" (1998), by Kathryn Lay; "Child of Faerie" (1998), by Gail Kimberly; "The New Girl" (1998), by Sean Stewart. [[/labelnote]]
227* ''Half Human'' (2001)[[labelnote:Contents]]"Becoming" (2001), by Nancy Springer; "Centaur Field" (2001), by Jane Yolen; "Elder Brother" (2001; from the Tortall Universe), by Tamora Pierce; "How to Make a Human" (2001), by Lawrence Schimel; "Linnea" (2001), by D. J. Malcolm; "Princess Dragonblood" (2001), by Jude Mandell; "Scarecrow" (2001), by Gregory Maguire; "Soaring" (2001), by Tim Waggoner; "The Hardest, Kindest Gift" (2001), by Bruce Coville; "Water's Edge" (2001), by Janni Lee Simner.[[/labelnote]]
228* ''The One Right Thing'' (2008)[[note]]Released in hardcover only.[[/note]][[labelnote:Contents]]"The Stinky Princess" (1999); "I, Earthling" (1994); "The Guardian of Memory" (1998); "A Life in Miniature" (2003); "The Troddler" (2005); "Old Glory" (1991); "Just Like You" (1994); ''The World's Worst Fairy Godmother'' (1996; complete novel previously released separately); "The Box" (1986); "My Little Brother Is a Monster" (1993); "The Giant's Tooth" (1999); "Ragged John" (1988); "Saying No to Nick" (2008); "Clean as a Whistle" (1994); "With His Head Tucked Underneath His Arm" (1993); "Wizard's Boy" (1996); "The Metamorphosis of Justin Jones" (1997). [[/labelnote]]
229* ''Bruce Coville's Book of Fear'' (2012; e-book only release)[[labelnote:Contents]]"There's Nothing Under the Bed", "The Japanese Mirror", "The Thing in Auntie Alma's Pond", "Herbert Hutchison in the Underworld", "The Language of Blood", "The Mask of Eamonn Tiyado". All stories were previously collected in the ''Oddities'' series.[[/labelnote]]
230
231[[/folder]]
232
233[[folder:Other books by Bruce Coville:]]
234
235* ''Prehistoric People'' (1990, nonfiction)
236* ''The Dungeon'' #2: ''The Dark Abyss'' (1989) -- Coville's contribution to a fantasy series organized by Creator/PhilipJoseFarmer and written by multiple authors.
237* ''Planet Builders'' #1: ''Mountain of Stolen Dreams'' (as Robyn Tallis) -- part of a ten-book, six-author series.
238* ''Planet Builders'' #6: ''Night of Two New Moons'' (as Robyn Tallis)
239* ''Planet Builders'' #10: ''Fire in the Sky'' (as Robyn Tallis)
240
241[[/folder]]
242----
243!!Works by Bruce Coville with their own pages include:
244
245[[index]]
246* ''Literature/TheAIGang''
247* ''Literature/AmberBrown''
248* ''Literature/ArmageddonSummer''
249* ''Literature/BruceCovillesBookOf''
250* ''Literature/CampHauntedHills''
251* ''Literature/TheDragonslayers''
252* ''Literature/TheEnchantedFiles''
253* ''Literature/GoblinsInTheCastle''
254* ''Literature/IWasASixthGradeAlien'' %%Redirects to a shared book/TV series page.
255* ''Literature/MagicShop''
256* ''Literature/MonsterOfTheYear''
257* ''Literature/MoongobbleAndMe''
258* ''Literature/MyTeacherIsAnAlien''
259* ''Literature/NinaTanleven''
260* ''Literature/OddlyEnough''
261* ''Literature/RodAllbrightAlienAdventures''
262* ''Literature/SpaceBrat''
263* ''Literature/TheMonstersOfMorleyManor''
264* ''Literature/TheUnicornChronicles''
265[[/index]]
266
267!!General works by Bruce Coville contain examples of:
268
269* CreatorThumbprint:
270** Quite a few works involve miniaturized individuals. Aside from the ''Rod Allbright Alien Adventures'' series with its two-inch aliens and ''The Monsters of Morley Manor'' with its five inch title characters, characters are shrunk to two inches in the second installment of the ''I Was A Sixth Grade Alien'' series.
271** Coville's hometown of Syracuse, New York is a recurring setting in his works, including ''Literature/NinaTanleven'', ''Literature/IWasASixthGradeAlien'' and ''Literature/MonsterOfTheYear'', and [[Literature/RodAllbrightAlienAdventures Rod Allbright]]'s hometown is based on it (book 4 mentions that Rod and Coville "live in the same area".
272** HumansThroughAlienEyes, with aliens offering their often-critical opinions on modern human society and culture.
273* DevelopmentHell: Coville has a number of books he'd LIKE to write, including further installments in ''The Unicorn Chronicles'', the ''Literature/MagicShop'' series, the ''Literature/NinaTanleven'' series and others. Unfortunately, publishers don't seem interested, leaving these plans unfulfilled for now. The truly curious can find references to many of these works and others in his replies on the guestbook of his official website.
274* TheVerse: ''The Foolish Giant'', ''Literature/TheDragonslayers'', the ''[[Literature/GoblinsInTheCastle Goblins]]'' duology, the ''Literature/MagicShop'' series, ''Literature/TheUnicornChronicles'' and a handful of short stories all take place in the same [[TheMultiverse multiverse]]. Specific links include:
275** The wizard Bellenmore and his apprentice Aaron link multiple series: they appear in person in Coville's short story "Wizard's Boy" (from ''[[Literature/BruceCovillesBookOf Bruce Coville's Book of Magic]]''), and are mentioned in ''Goblins on the Prowl'', ''[[Literature/MagicShop Jeremy Thatcher, Dragon Hatcher]]'' and ''The Unicorn Chronicles''. All three stories talk about how Bellenmore had sent the majority of Earth's dragons away from their birth world for their own safety, and the latter two feature dragons who were directly affected by Bellenmore's actions.
276** ''Goblins on the Prowl'' describes the events of ''The Foolish Giant'' as happening in its past, and references characters from ''The Dragonslayers''.
277** The short story "The Boy With Silver Eyes" features the title character visiting Nilbog (from the ''Goblins'' duology) and meeting a Guardian of Memory (from ''The Unicorn Chronicles'').
278* YouAreNotReady: This excuse is used by all of Coville's aliens for why they don't swoop down and end all disease and strife on Earth. ''I Was a Sixth Grade Alien'' in particular just has them as merchants who wanted stuff in return -- they got peanut butter and ketchup.
279
280!!Other specific works contain examples of:
281
282* BlindAndTheBeast: ''A Glory of Unicorns'' has the short story "The Ugly Unicorn", in which a blind maiden befriends what she thinks is a beautiful Poh unicorn... who is too ashamed to admit to her that he is really an ugly Liu-Mu unicorn.
283* FaceHeelTurn: The plot of ''Sarah's Unicorn'' is kicked off by one of these. Sarah's aunt Mag had a spell backfire on her that turned her heart to stone and made her mean, treating Sarah cruelly and making her fetch nasty things from the forest. Eventually, the unicorn Oakheart breaks the spell with his healing magic, letting Mag [[HeelFaceTurn become good again]].
284* HalfHumanHybrid: The anthology ''Half Human'' is a collection of short stories all about this trope. These half-human creatures range from the traditional to the unexpected, with just a few examples being a girl who discovers one morning that her hair has turned into snakes overnight and that her mother doesn't wear a turban all the time just for the hat factor, another girl who was conceived when her mother drank dragon blood and begins exhibiting dragon-like mannerisms and [[BodyHorror sprouting ridges on her back]] when she grows up, and a ''tree'' [[HumanityEnsues transformed into a man who must learn how to be human]].
285* RelatedInTheAdaptation:
286** In the short story "My Little Brother Is a Monster", Jason Burger and his mom adopt Dum Pling / Little Dumpling as a part of their family, but do not share blood with him. When it was expanded into the full novel ''Always October'', Jason was replaced with Jacob Doolittle, whose grandfather Arthur was married twice; his first wife, Tia [=LaMontagne=] (alias Teelamun) had two children, Meer Askanza (the mother of Little Dumpling) and Mazrak. After she disappeared and Arthur remarried, his second wife bore him a son, Jacob's father. This makes Little Dumpling into Jacob's paternal cousin by blood (and by extension his mother into Jacob's aunt), and Mazrak into both Jacob and Little Dumpling's uncle.
287** In the original short story, only one member of the Council of Poets -- Keegel Farzym -- was related to Dum Pling. In ''Always October'', another of them is his maternal grandmother Teelamun.
288
289%%!!Coville's short stories contain examples of:

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