You’re the first & I’ll gladly second the motion. Her “Red As Blood or Tales from the Sisters Grimmer” is a witty, grim retelling of several famous tales. Truly excellent.
Her newer “White as Snow” is in my “to be read” pile & will be moved to the top. Thanks for the reminder.
Ms. Lee is one of my favorite writers. Fantasy, science fiction, etc. She can do it all. If only Ann Rice could write so well.
McKinley is wonderful (I am a little biased, since my username makes it obvious I’m a McKinley fan), and as well as Deerskin, *Spindle’s End[/ii], and Beauty, read Rose Daughter.
Fire and Hemlock, by Diana Wynne Jones, is a retelling of Tamlin. Very good, too.
George MacDonald’s The Princess and the Goblin is a classic.
I loved reworked fairy fiction - so I’ve appreciated this thread.
I’ve recently read three good ones, all from the YA (young adult) section of the library:
Breath by Donna Jo Napoli
East by Edith Pattou
and
The Witch’s Boy by Michael Gruber.
If I were to rework a fairy tale, I think The Pied Piper has lots of potential. I’ve read 3 re-done versions, and it still intriques me, esp. the concept of the lives of the parents & one child left behind at the end.
Dang – I really outdid myself with all those typos in my previous post. And I forgot to mention one of my favorites, Just Ella by Margaret Peterson Haddix. I liked Jane Yolen’s Briar Rose also. There’s probably many more, but my mind’s shooting blanks.
Getting away from the YA versions, check out Lauren Slater’s new book, Blue Beyond Blue, a collection of fairy tales she wrote exploring psychological themes.
One of her stories is included in the collection I mentioned in my previous post (Spells of Enchantment, edited by Jack Zipes). I think it was a rewriting of Cinderella. Her writing is amazing.
I thought I was going to have to mention The Neverending Story. (The first movie as well is a classic, of course, even if it only covers half the book. In case you didn’t know, the other movies are terrible. )
While not exactly fairy tales per se, Terry Gilliam’s fantasy movies might work. The Adventures of Baron von Munchausen is the most fairy-tale like, as it tells some of the various tall tales associated with Munchausen. The Brothers Grimm is difficult to like (but you might).
Since he wasn’t explicitly ruled out, Hans Christian Andersen. Especially if you haven’t read the less popular stories, or the original forms of the well-known ones.
In the vein of the more elaborately fantastic, there are the tales of E.T.A. Hoffman and Ludwig Tieck.
And my favorite fairy tale movie is Ever After, with Drew Barrymore doing a creditable job as Cinderalla and Angelica Huston chewing the scenery as the wicked stepmother.
A second on this movie. The Red Hiding Hood character, Vanessa (Witherspoon) is leaving her crackaddicted recently arrested prostitute mother (Amanda Plummer) and stepfather to go live in her Granny’s trailer, but along the way she falls prey to a serial killer, big bad Bob Wolverton (Sutherland- get it, Big Bad Wolverton) and things take a detour. It’s irreverent and funny, you get to hear Brooke Shields say really bad words and it’s violent and gross (like the fairy tale) but really good.
Here’s a blip that will tell you whether or not you like it, but it contains a fairly big spoiler [though it’s not from the final scene or anywhere near it]:
[spoiler]
Vanessa has wrestled Wolverton’s gun from him and is holding it on him.
Vanessa: This is a crucial question, Bob. Do you believe in the lord Jesus Christ and take him for your personal savior?
Bob: WHAT?!
Vanessa: Goddamn it Bob this is IMPORTANT! Now answer me! Do you believe in the lord Jesus Christ and take him for your personal savior?
Bob: I… yes!
Vanessa: Good! [empties the gun into him] [/spoiler]
If you laughed, you’ll like the movie. If you’re offended, stay away.
There’s Daughter of the Forest by Juliet Marillier, which is a decent retelling of the tale about the girl who had to weave shirts to turn her brothers from swans back into humans.
In high school, we read a short story that was a highly erotic/sexualized retelling of “Little Red Ridinghood” for sophomore English. I seem to remember it was called “In the Company of Wolves”, but I don’t remember who wrote it.
I lurve The Tenth Kingdom so much. One of my friends loves it too, so all we have to do to get the other one to laugh is say, “It’s perfectly natural to want to touch it,” or “Only my girlfriend touches me there!” (Yes, yes, penises entertain us endlessly.) Singing “Saturday Night Fever” is good for a giggle, too. Wolf is definitely my favorite character, though I’m fond of the blind woodsman. Have you ever seen a tree move?
So many that I’d forgetten–for some reason, I hadn’t put The Adventures of Baron von Munchausen into the fairy tale category, probably because of Vulcan and company. I liked Brothers Grimm quite a bit, though some of it did seem a bit half-hearted and the ending unsatisfying and a little muddled. I wish it could be re-done, as I really do adore movies like that and it hurts when they aren’t entirely good. I grew up on The Neverending Story movie and Willow and that sort, so movies like that are definitely on my like list.
Freeway sounds hilarious, and I’ll have to see if I can track down a copy.
Keep it coming, guys. With my goal of getting a head start this summer on the reading list of the grad school I want to get into and delving into critical works, I think my to-read list is hovering around 200 books. Let’s see if we can get it to break three hundred.