The Rise & Fall & Rise of Choose Your Own Adventure Books

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Published 2021-10-14
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Choose Your Own Adventure Books are a series of children's gamebooks where the reader assumes the role of the protagonist and makes choices that determine the main character's actions and the plot's outcome.

Choose Your Own Adventure Books were based upon a concept created by Edward Packard and were wildly popular throughout the 80's and 90's before kind of falling off the map.

Choose Your Own Adventure Books are a part of pop culture, so much so that it has led to a few lawsuits, most notably against Netflix regarding Black Mirror: Bandersnatch.



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All Comments (21)
  • @JonnyInfinite
    "You're walking down the hall. Turn to page 6 to take the left door" turns to page 6 "You fall down a never ending pit and are never seen again. You're deader than dead" ffs - 9 year old me
  • I'm over 40 years old and I'm not ashamed to admit I own several of these books and still read them. Space Vampire is probably my favorite.
  • @user-ik8ts2lf1u
    My mom got me The Cave of Time and The Mystery of Chimney Rock for Christmas one year. I wasn't too excited because I didn't think books were a great gift. Then I read them. They quickly became my favorite books and I started collecting them. Decades later, I still have them and treasure them. Thank you Mama!
  • @privatename5788
    38 endings, 37 of which led to horrible death. Great, fun reading.
  • When a Dungeons and Dragons player was home alone in the 80's a 'choose your own adventure' book was the best companion!
  • @MetalJesusRocks
    I loved this series as a kid and I still have several of my original books. Many great memories there…
  • Back in elementary school, early 80’s we were assigned a project to write a letter to somebody famous or influential. I wrote Mr. Packard. I received a letter back from him which I still have to this day. I was requesting him to write me in as a character in a story. He responded back that I was always a character in the story. Realizing now that I’m older what he meant. He did stamp the letter with a cool type of Indian elephant stamp. I had not thought about the letter or the books in a couple decades. It was nice to have this randomly pop up & brought back many years of good childhood memories. Thank you!
  • @jschap712
    The deaths didn't traumatize me when I was a kid. After all, the book taught me the valuable lesson that if you risk your life and get killed in the process, all you need to do is remember the page you came from and try the other choice. It's worked well for me.
  • When my daughter was born last year I started thinking about my own childhood rites of passage and bought a used copy of Gorga the Space Monster. One day she picked it up and started flipping through it so I read her a few lines. Then I googled Packard, found his website and sent him an email of thanks. This dude WROTE ME BACK. I guess he had less to do since we were all pandemic quarantined. He wrote me back twice. We had a lovely chat.
  • @koolandblue
    The best part of those books was always trying to get myself killed. The plots to those books were never all that riveting, but the death scenes were always described very well and really stuck with me as a boy. One I remember is this- "Before you lose consciousness, a vision of your family passes in front of you. You close your eyes to savor the image. It's the last thing you'll ever see."
  • @frankb821
    A few years ago I decided to recollect original Choose Your Own Adventure books from local used bookstores, and have so far found and bought 57 of the original 200+ books. I don't even have any kids, but my wife and I enjoy reading them to each other as a sentimental throwback, and a fun way of deciding who gets to make certain decisions affecting us jointly. I read her a story and if she dies, I get to make the decision, and vice versa :) it has worked out pretty well! My all time favorite books include "Vampire Express," "Ghost Hunter," and "The Abominable Snowman."
  • I am 47. One of my favorites in this series was Inside UFO 54-40. I was today years old when I learned that there was, in fact, NO WAY to reach the “good ending”. Decades of therapy answered in this one question 😂😂😂
  • When I was in 6th grade, we had a reading competition to see who could read the most books. There was a big debate whether my CYOA books counted since you didn’t necessarily read the “whole” book. So I had to agree to read every possible ending in order for it to count. I won by reading every CYOA book available at the time.
  • @LamarrWilson
    I started with CYOA, and because of those books ended up reading Encyclopedia Brown and EVERY Hardy Boys book including the Case Files and any with Nancy Drew starring in them. What a foundation back in the 80’s/90’s. Thanks for this video. 🙏🏾👍🏾
  • @AJBernard
    I first discovered "The Cave of Time" in my local public library. My father had insisted we take piano lessons, and we were goign to the piano store in the local shopping mall... every week we'd get our allowance and then go to piano lessons. I would have my lesson first, because the piano store was just down the way from the Waldenbooks... every week I'd go in and buy a book... I remember that I could afford one book a week, but if I saved my change for a few weeks, every few weeks I could buy two books. I had a massive collection of CYOA books, and when I finally grew out of them I donated them to a local charity... some kid got my pile of books for Christmas in the early 90s. I hope that kid loved them as much as I did. Thank you for this wonderful trip down memory lane.
  • @kratze1738
    As a kid, I used to come home from school sometimes and find one of these on my bed. No note, no explanation, no expectations. I'd read it for the next several hours, going through each possibility until I'd gotten almost all of them. One of the best memories from a childhood that wasn't always that great.
  • @TimHunold
    This was Generation X's introduction to hypertext and the reason we ran with the internet in the early days. We also often did flip-book animations in the footers.
  • I still remember getting that very first print of "Choose Your Own Adventure: In the Cave of Time", from a Scholastic catalog in 1979, when I was in the 5th grade. It became my absolute favorite book, and from that point on, whenever I discovered a new book published, I had my parents snag it for me. I got the ENTIRE original run of Choose Your Own Adventure books, plus the subsequent year's run of Dungeons & Dragons Choose Your Own Adventure books. I still have those books in my book case here. All of them. They were ground-breaking and I'm willing to say, very integral in my getting involved in Dungeons & Dragons and role playing games in 1980. Strangely, in all these years, I've never met anyone other than myself who read these books or knew of their existence. Oh, there are some people I know today, who know about them simply because of the name had entered the common lexicon, but have never actually encountered or read them. I used to tell people all about how great these books were when I was a kid, only to receive blank stares.
  • @QuakerPop
    My dad taught me to read early in life and I found and loved these books at a young age. My aunt was actually friends with Edward Packard's wife and when I was 8 she took me out to lunch in New York City - a cool restaurant with crayons and paper tablecloths at every table so you could doodle while you waited. We were ushered to our table and sitting there was a smiling man with salt and pepper hair that I never saw before. It was Edward Packard himself! He was as nice as you might imagine....a hero who lived up to your expectations. i still have battered, dog-eared autographed copies of Cave of Time, My Name is Jonah and Chimney Rock, nearly 40 years later....
  • @DejanOfRadic
    It is impossible to describe how those books really felt interactive back in the early 80's. The world had very few choices, but video games and these books had endless choices with epic consequences.