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Choose Your Own Adventure!

I used to love Choose Your Own Adventure books, and the fact that that's far from a unique statement is less of an indictment of me and more of a testament to how amazing this giant collection of you-shape-the-stories was/is.

It feels nearly pointless to describe what they were, but assuming that there is even a single reader who never soaked in a CYOA book at some point, it worked like this: Read a page or two, and you'd be given options as to what the book's star character should do next. If you wanted to do "Action A," you turned to "Page X." If you wanted to do "Action B," you turned to "Page XX." Rinse and repeat that for many pages, and what you had were these great, strange little stories with multiple endings, ranging from the mediocre to the ultra-happy, and even including a few where poor decisions caused your character to die in horrible ways.

The novelty of turning books into games notwithstanding, CYOA titles could be equally championed for the broad range of eerie and awesome topics they covered. In one book, your character attended a Halloween party in a house that may or may not have been filled with flesh-eating monsters. In another, you ran marathons with the Abominable Snowman. There were plenty of titles with lighter themes, but I always viewed the CYOA franchise as being my first introduction to "unsettling reading."

If you forced me to pick a favorite, I wouldn't have much trouble. Meet Gorga!


Gorga, The Space Monster was one of the "young reader" CYOA books, with more pictures, less pages and increased spacing between letters. I picked it up from the Troll Book Club during grade school and read it no less than 15,000 times. The story involves a young boy who finds a car-sized, three-eyed purple space monster in his backyard, which grows larger and larger throughout the book. Depending on which "actions" you chose to take, Gorga would be portrayed as everything from a befuddled pet to an out-of-control, planet-destroying maniac.

There wasn't a definitive strategy involved with finding your way to one of the "good endings." Not that it mattered much: If you ended up with a bad one, all you had to do was flip back to the original page and pick the other action. (Technically, this was cheating, but who was going to admonish you? Gorga? Gorga was paper; he couldn't do shit.) Despite your decision-making process adding up to a crapshoot, it was still smart to avoid actions that seemed to be in bad taste:


This trick didn't work universally, but more often than not, being a "nice kid" usually paved way for happier endings. In the case shown above, hitting poor Gorga over the head with a log brought forth an abrupt ending in which the monster...well, ate you. The "abrupt bad ending" was the worst thing that could happen to a CYOA reader. It was like walking into a Goomba on Level 1-1.

Happier endings involved the lead character successfully keeping Gorga safe from gun-toting officials, but in a way, I preferred the vaguely horrific bad endings. When I sat on Gorga's back and flew him safely into space, yeah, I did good, but I didn't really think about the story after closing the book. When something bad happened, it stuck with me for a little longer. See below.


I wouldn't say that I actively sought out bad endings (I wanted to "win" more than I wanted Gorga to eat me and my family), but when you're a kid and you're just entering the wild world of books that aren't 85% pictures, this kind of creepy stuff has a lasting effect.

The Choose Your Own Adventure series was enormously successful. Debuting in 1979 and still running today in some form or another, it's amassed hundreds of titles with several printings. Course, I don't want you to mistake this entry as a random tribute to CYOA, as I'm really only here to point to the obvious deity that is Gorga the space monster. I loved him!


Purple, porcine and triple-eyed, Gorga was easy to draw and fun to color. And, in one version of the story, he grew large enough to eat a passenger train. These are the traits of something worth sacrificing a live chicken to. Gorga deserves at least one Google hit that sends people to something other than a used book storefront, and if it's my destiny to make that happen, I can now retire with my head held high.

Posted by Matt on 01/31/2008. E-mail me!



Discussion Thread: 183 comments

I still read some of those. You know what’s weird? I was talking about The Chose Your OWn Adventure books on the Box 23 thread and then this pops out.

Chestnuts roasted by Andre @ 02/01/2008 1:02 AM


Count me as another Mario Bros CYOA reader. I loved those things!

Chestnuts roasted by Jeff Mack @ 02/01/2008 1:05 AM


I remember one of the early ones … I think it was called “Space and Beyond” or something … Anyway, the stories in it were okay, but I specifically remember there was one page in the book that no other page led to. It said something like: “You’re not quite sure how you got here … by luck or by accident … or by something divine. Regardless, you’ve discovered something new and original … blah blah blah” … And your character took off into a whole new universe.

I guess it’s kinda lame now, but I discovered that page by accident … and I thought it was super awesome at the time.

I also loved the artwork that came with each book. That’s half the reason I bought any of the titles.

Chestnuts roasted by James @ 02/01/2008 1:21 AM


You are a Shark was my second favorite. All time top honors, though, is the Space Vampire one. The Space Vampire’s home planet was filled with other vampires and the oceans were made of blood. It still bothers me to this day. WHERE DID ALL THE BLOOD COME FROM? Also, I had a bit of a vampire fetish, so I would purposefully try to get turned, but to do that, the vampire had to suck out half your blood and inject you with some of his, which could only happen one way in the book. Otherwise, he’d just drain you and you’d die.

Chestnuts roasted by Cambot @ 02/01/2008 1:42 AM


I loved these books! My favorite was one where you worked at a marine center with Dolphins over the summer. I found out from this book that Dolphins can and will ram you with their heads. I was terrified of my “swimming with the Dolphins” trip I took that year. I just knew I would be rammed into a rock from an angry male Dolphin.

Chestnuts roasted by Empare @ 02/01/2008 1:54 AM


Ahh yes…choose your own adventure books! those were a staple of my early school years,starting with a 3rd grade troll book order form circa 1979,which contained therein the very first CYOA book,”the cave of time”.back then,to a young person like myself,such a novelty as choosing my own ending to a story was indeed a pleasant surprise.of course,upon discovery of said books,my classmates and i eagerly snapped up evey title we could get our hands on,at least until we got sick of it and moved onto more important concerns,like “colecovision”(which is a whole other story in itself! lol.) Nonetheless,i’ve still held onto my collection of CYOA books,all 13 that i had collected…a little bit yellowed and worse for wear and tear,but otherwise still capable of bringing me back in time to a simpler day…thanks matt for conjuring up those memories again :)

Chestnuts roasted by Steve_B @ 02/01/2008 2:13 AM


I remember having several of these, but the one that stands out mostly had something to do with robots. I don’t remember the particulars of it, but that stands out. I also remember writing a story when I was like 8 or so that had to do with a zombie knocking on someone’s window and stalking them. When it ended, it turned out the zombie was a robot covered in rotting flesh. I was a gorehound from Day 1.

I was also one of those kids that started reading really scary, adult oriented stuff early on, like Stephen King and such. I got in trouble and got a vampire book confiscated from a teacher in the 5th grade because it was “inappropriate.”

Bill, I used to love the book fairs. It was kind of like Christmas when the box o’ books finally showed up in the classroom.

Totally off subject, but the Hasbro Transformers site has a really cool video up right now. Someone took the Optimus Prime/Megatron battle from “Transformers: The Movie” and re-animated it using CGI. I think in some ways it looks better than the live action movie. Check it out:

http://www.hasbro.com/transformers/universe/

So, I had a pretty dramatic, weird night at work tonight at the pizza place I work at sometimes (my second job). Our head cook was late, and I guess it was one time too many because he got into a big screaming match with one of the managers and got fired right there on the spot. Then, about 10 minutes later, one of the other managers got a call saying her ex-boyfriend was found dead in his house this afternoon. She went into hysterics and had to be taken home. It got worse though, cause the ex-boyfriend was also the brother of our hostess. She was on her way to work and didn’t know about it yet. She had to find out when she arrived to work. Watching her find out her brother was dead was something I doubt I’m ever going to forget. One of the other waitresses that was supposed to be there tonight is also good friends with him, so she didn’t show up either. We almost shut the whole restaurant down because half of our kitchen staff and waitstaff was missing, but ended up staying open anyway. Needless to say, I was swamped all night. I had to take care of half the restaurant myself and was running around all night. I didn’t know the guy that died, but he was close to a lot of people who work there. He was either the brother, ex-boyfriend, or good friend to half the waistaff and management, so it’s pretty nutty. Oh, in case you’re wondering, it turns out it was a gas leak in his house that did it. I think he was asleep and just didn’t feel a thing.

In slightly better news, I mentioned in an earlier post that my radio show would be back on the air tonight, but I’m going to wait another week, and have it debut next Thursday night. I’ve still got a lot of stuff I want to put together for it, and there’s some more promotion I want to do before I get back on the air. It’ll be worth it though. I just don’t have everything prepared yet. I’ll make another announcement via MySpace and stuff between now and then.

Chestnuts roasted by DJ D @ 02/01/2008 2:15 AM


My favourite was “Ninja Cyborg”. It was great!

The story was really cool and surprisingly well-written. I went through just about every path you can take.

Depending on what you do, you can stay in the past and confront a powerful cyborg Ninja having no idea what he is, or travel to the future and learn all about him.

In the future, you can either team up with a rebel hacker (by choosing to follow his army of robot bugs) or an ancient Ninja master (by not following the bugs).

And, of course, the “Ninjaborg” was quite capable of killing you if you didn’t play your cards right.

OMG I LOVED THAT BOOK!

Anyway, I wonder why they don’t make CYOA books with more adult stories.

I’d love to see a “Choose Your Own Romance” story for housewives!

To run away with Raul to his villa in Spain read page 365

To stay home and work things out with your husband read page 132.

Chestnuts roasted by Tetsu Deinonychus @ 02/01/2008 3:05 AM


Oh god, the adult versions would just have no end to the possibilities, and could somehow be a lot more depressing than the kids versions.

To continue to stay in the dead end job that has nothing to do with your bachelor’s degree, yet pays well and has great medical/dental (and let’s face it, you know you really need to take a visit to the dentist cause you’ve been putting it off forever and you’ve got that weird pain that comes and goes and you really need to have that checked out, plus there’s that cute girl in Accounting that you’ve been flirting with in the break room. You don’t really know what her “situation” is, but if you keep it up, you’re sure you’ll make some kind of headway in the next week or so), turn to page 32

If you want to quit the job, go back to school, and persue a Masters in your real passion, while waiting tables and going another $40,000 into debt and graduating and mabye getting some professional work sometime in your mid-thirties, turn to page 51.

Chestnuts roasted by DJ D @ 02/01/2008 3:45 AM


I only had a few CYOA books, but I had A LOT of Goosebumps “You Choose the Scare” books. Because it was Goosebumps, your character usually ended up chopped up/eaten/stuck in some horrible place. Seriously, I think every book had like…one ending that didn’t end with you being dead.

Chestnuts roasted by Cass @ 02/01/2008 5:58 AM


The first CYOA book I remember getting as a kid was “Secret of the Sun God”, and I remember that I made a point to read it in its entirety. That is, I made damn sure that I found every possible ending and story path. If I saw an ending that I hadn’t read to yet, it became a search of back-flipping through the entire book to find the source pages. So if I noticed a cool-looking “The End” on page 79 for example, I would flip through every page looking for one that said “Turn to page 79″ at the bottom, and then kept backtracking that way. For some reason, I never found this process frustrating as a kid….

But at any rate, my personal favorite CYOA book was “Prisoner of the Ant People”. Pure sci-fi gold!

Chestnuts roasted by Benjamino @ 02/01/2008 8:18 AM


There were loads of CYOA knock-offs and influenced publications. Not sure about the US, but here in the UK, we got a set of paper ‘Back To The Future’ booklets in Shreddies cereal to tie in with the 1985 movie. Some decisions paralleled the movie story, while you could choose other options and generally mess things up. I still have a couple of these booklets.

There was also a ‘Masters of the Universe’ one by Ladybird that was really cool. It also involved tossing a dice to see how bad you got hurt in battle, but I never bothered with that. The story itself was something to do with Man-At-Arms having his memory drained by Skeletor, and He-Man having to travel to Snake Mountain to reverse it. Damn, old Man-At-A never did have much luck! This book was cool as it featured tonnes of MOTU characters, even lesser used ones.

Chestnuts roasted by Jay Firestorm @ 02/01/2008 8:21 AM


My favorite was always “The Forbidden Castle”, with “The Curse of Chimney Rock” as a close second. I love CYOA.

Chestnuts roasted by Kendra @ 02/01/2008 9:57 AM


Awesome. I loved these books, but I can’t relaly remember too many. I know there was one about finding Champ, the U.S. Loch-Ness Monster.

Chestnuts roasted by BelmarBenny @ 02/01/2008 10:28 AM


Ahhh CYOA… I remember this series in 5th grade. Like I mentioned a day or two ago I was a very shy kid, and by that time I realized recess was lonely and I got bored just wandering around by myself so I went to the library checked out a book, read it that afternoon, and then the next day I returned the book and checked out a new one. I went through a CYOA streak. I remember one specifically this group of kids won in a contest to get a trip to an amusement park before it opened to the public. The beginning everyone got there at night and they were all going to their hotel rooms and the kids decided they couldn’t wait until the next day so they wanted to sneak out and go by themselves to the park. Well your first choice of the book was to go with them or go to your hotel room. Well when you went back to the hotel room you decide to take a bath and the radio drops into (or a small tv I don’t remember, probably a tv) the bathtub and he electrocutes himself. I think that was a hard book not to choose to kill yourself in. I remember seeing a knock off series with them being Mario bros themed and possibly zelda themed? I heard of people reading straight through and I can’t wrap my head around that nonsense.

Transformers movie animated version 1986 from what the angry nintendo nerd said about this movie this movie sounds epic. But I am not interested in Transformers.

Chestnuts roasted by Goob @ 02/01/2008 10:36 AM


I was an avid reader of CYOA Books, still have all of them on a bookshelf in my den. Im proud to say that I have my own copy of Gorga as well. I seem to remember the one involving kids in a haunted english castle being my favorite.

Chestnuts roasted by Greg @ 02/01/2008 11:10 AM


wow, I must have read the crappy ones. All the talk of the ones you all have read started jogging my memory…
I remember one about trying to find the Anasazi. I believe I was sent back in time at one point and BECAME an anasazi. woo. adventure up the yin-yang THERE. *rolls eyes*
And the only GOOD one I had had something to do with being an American Samurai in Japan, which is weird, cause like you’re supposed to be what? 10, 12? in these books and yeah- I’m gonna go kick the asses of a squadron of ninjas.
I won’t deny they were inventive, but somehow I wound up with all the shitty ones.
Maybe that were my… animosity of CYOA books comes from.

Chestnuts roasted by kittyma @ 02/01/2008 11:37 AM


Hey Matt,

I remember these, but the Fighting Fantasy books were much bigger in the UK. Same deal, ‘cept you were usually in a dungeon doing typical AD&D things, and got the fun of rolling dice to beat up orcs and stuff. Didn’t have dice handy? You riffled the pages of the book randomly and a pair of dice were printed at the bottom of every page.

Naturally, we cheated ;)

Chestnuts roasted by Dave Simmons @ 02/01/2008 11:56 AM


Were there any CYOA videogames? Or something that used that format? It would seem this could easilly work in that format.

Chestnuts roasted by JLAJRC @ 02/01/2008 11:57 AM


I didnt really read CYOA books, I have no idea why, but I didn’t. I was obsessed with Babysitters Club at around age 7, and then quickly turned back to things like Beverly Cleary and the classics like “The Secret Garden”. I also became obsessed with UFO’s at the age of 9…probably because of Unsolved Mysteries….my sister liked Goosebumps and would have nightmares because of them. I read one and thought it was effing dumb….but oh well. Other than that, I turned to fun authors like Chuck Palahniuk in high school.

Chestnuts roasted by Leigha @ 02/01/2008 12:06 PM


Cambot: I think I had the sequel to the Space Vampires one, but I never read the original. In mine, you were on Earth and you had a gun that was sort of like a Ghostbusters proton back, but tuned for vampires. You could end up zapping the crap out of a couple making out in an alley, and I think getting arrested. One ending I remember well was trying to trick the vampires into flying their spaceship into a sunny location so you could push a button and open the windows, killing them. You didn’t know what time it was, so you had to tell them to fly to either the North or South pole where there would be 24 hour sunlight. Hurrah science.

Goob: That’s “Daredevil Park,” I believe. I’d forgotten about the bathtub death scene, but now that you mention it I remember being extremely envious of that giant bathtub. There was also one where you tried to hide in a coffin and ended up being crushed by an animatronic vampire.

kittymao: There were a bunch like that. “You are a Kung Fu Master.” “You are a Ninja.” “You are a Martial Arts Master.” For some reason, it seemed like I always managed to get in on the second or third in the series with those, and could never find the first ones. So I sort of hated them too because I didn’t really know who any of the characters were supposed to be.

JLAJRC: Woo, marathon post! The Japanese have a whole genre of games that are basically still screen shots based around a CYOA format. Most of the ones that get translated into English are dating sims or outright porn, but I remember having a disc of poorly-translated games about a decade ago that were less nipple-oriented. They involve a great deal of reading, but the art is generally pretty good.

Chestnuts roasted by Jedoc @ 02/01/2008 12:28 PM


Dave Simmons, oh man did we cheat, like they really expected us to admit when we fudged a roll or didn’t pick up the right item earlier on.

One of my favourites in the same vein, was a tie-in to the Knightmare TV series, which included named characters.

Chestnuts roasted by Guise @ 02/01/2008 1:07 PM


There needs to be a CYOA for X-E. It would be a treasure hunt through the virtual vault of Pop Culture the X represents. One wrong choice, and you’re trapped in the AC crappy game room.

Chestnuts roasted by kingklash @ 02/01/2008 2:00 PM


Late to the CYOA party. I too LOVED the Mario Bros. books. It was a way to expand your game playing into READING which was perfect for a bookworm like me. I remember I got one as a gift and I didn’t think i would even like it, and instead, it turned into a book I read over and over…sigh. :)

We still sell these at the bookstore I work at, and I am always pushing them on kids and their parents.

Chestnuts roasted by Muppet Baby @ 02/01/2008 2:17 PM


There needs to be a CYOA for X-E. It would be a treasure hunt through the virtual vault of Pop Culture the X represents. One wrong choice, and you’re trapped in the AC crappy game room.

Yeah, like we’re not addicted to X-E enough as it is. Do you realize how irrestable a challange that would be? You know, you really shouldn’t enable an addict.

I have this vision of me a month from now sitting in my room all crazy-eyed from lack of sleep and being jacked up on coffee and Sierra Mist Cranberry Splash, frantically trying to backpedal my steps to figure out how I ended up in the AC game room again….”I know, I miscalculated my age based on salad dressing again! Yeah, that’s it! Now, if I just take the number of awkward moments in the 1991 Macy’s Thanksgiving Parade, add that to the number of heads that Legotron has collected so far and divide that by the number of movies in the real Mare Winningham’s filmography,….lessee…carry the 1….TURN TO PAGE 23!??? 23?? Dear god, no!

You’ll find me curled up in the corner muttering to myself….”ninja turtle pies….I’m pre-salad dressing..PRE-salad dressing, I tell you…crack babies killin’ babies…”

Chestnuts roasted by DJ DJ @ 02/01/2008 2:37 PM


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