Goosebumps isn't that scary, but Fear Street gave me nightmares for years.
Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
tamora pierce doesn't write stand alones.
My brother reads Goosebumps to my 6 year old nephew. There were points when I was there that D. was on edge, but he likes that. My brother lets him watch a lot of shit that I wouldn't. BUT. The things that give that kid sobbing nightmares are the death of his beloved Miss Kitty and Oscar the cannibalistic fish. So.... Reality is much more upsetting to him than fiction. But again, his dad kills mice for a living, so.
circle of magic ;the circle opens
protector of the small ( Song of the Lionesse leads into this but I never read it)
those are the ones I like the best
I somehow missed reading it as a kid.
That's sad. "There is such a thing as a tesseract." "Wild nights are my glory. I just got blown off course." "I do fact facts. They're a lot easier to face than people."
I loved Edward Eager. Seven Day Magic is a stand-alone. Half Magic starts a series of interlinked books, but the story is complete in each book.
The Borrowers? Stuart Little?
Doesn't Seven Day Magic have a part where they meet the kids from Half Magic ? I loved those books too.
Do they run across a girl picking up the charm? I can't remember. I may have to reread.
Tamora Pierce has a few different sets of books, most set in the same "world". You could probably start her either with the "Song of the Lioness" quartet ("Alanna: The First Adventure" being the first book in it, then "In the Hand of the Goddess", "Woman Who Rides Like a Man" and "Lioness Rampant").
The other quartet of hers that's a good intro to her characters would be the Keladry books--First Test, Page, Squire, and Lady Knight.
What meara said.
Although I'd put in a good word for the Oz books too. With the proper illustrations. Classic fantasy for the win!
I was going to recommend the Song of the Lioness quartet as a good start, but on rethink it might make sense to go with the Circle of Magic series. They're aimed at a slightly younger set, so might be a better intro to the author for even a very precocious 8-year-old. If she likes them, but wishes for something a tad older-feeling, then she's ready to jump into the Alanna and Keladry series (which do include some very fade-to-black love-making scenes as the characters get older, as a warning.)