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Public Library Of Youngstown & Mahoning County: Damsels In Distress And Other Non-Existent Things: 5 YA Fairy Tale Retellings 

Damsels in Distress and Other Non-Existent Things: 5 YA Fairy Tale Retellings

(Public Library of Youngstown & Mahoning County)

Taylor S.

March 3rd, 2022

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Damsels in Distress and Other Non-Existent Things: 5 YA Fairy Tale Retellings 

These fairy tales aren’t full of your normal damsels in distress, knights in shining armor, and one-dimensional evil queens. In this list, we are here to bring you some fantastic, intersectional fairy tale retellings that will make your heart soar, your spirit sing, and… a whole bunch of other upbeat idioms that describe fairy tales. A fair warning to all ye who enter this list – just because the original fairy tale might be all fun and games, that doesn’t mean that the books on this list will be devoid of dark twistiness.  

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A retelling of “The Snow Queen”, a fairytale by Hans Christian Andersen, this story follows Graciela, our main character who loses her magical gifts after being assaulted at a party, along with another nameless person. After all the trees in her world disappear, only to be replaced by mirrors, Graciela realizes that while her magical gifts have left, a new and evil magic is creeping in, threatening to destroy everything in its wake. When Lock, the young man who was assaulted alongside her, appears at her school with no memory of the incident and no ability to see the mirrors around them, Graciela knows that it is up to her to ensure their survival. 

The Mirror Season was written by Anna-Marie McLemore, a Mexican-American author who has loved folklore and fairy tales from a young age. They mostly write stories with magical realism and have had a lot of influence from the culture that they grew up within.  

You can read “The Snow Queen”, written in 1865 by Hans Christian Andersen, here.  

 

 

Skin of the Sea takes “The Little Mermaid” and puts a new spin on it. Simi used to pray to the gods, but when her prayers were answered and the goddess Yemoja (a Yoruba water goddess known as the mother of all Orishas) turns her into a Mami Wata, Simi realizes that mermaid life isn’t all it’s cracked up to be. After being charged with collecting the souls of those who die at sea, Simi goes against her job and the gods by saving a young man, Kola, from drowning. When the enraged gods find out that Simi has turned against them, she does anything that she has to in order to save both Kola and the rest of the mami wata.  

Skin of the Sea was written by Natasha Bowen, a Nigerian-Welsh author and teacher who writes mostly fantasy-driven stories. This is her first published novel, and Bowen states that researching for the book and writing it helped her to connect with her Nigerian Yoruba heritage.  

You can read Hans Chrsitian Andersen’s “The Little Mermaid” here.  

What if you took “Beauty and the Beast” and mixed it with… say… Groundhog Day? That is basically the premise of A Curse So Dark and Lonely. Throw a dash of The 10th Kingdom in there as well, and you’ve got yourself a pretty good book! A Curse So Dark and Lonely tells two parallel stories, one of Prince Rhen, the 18-year-old heir to Emberfall, who finds himself repeating his fate for the 327th time – every year he must try to fall in love, and have someone love him in return, or he is bound as a beast and forced to repeat the year over again. For Harper, things in the less-enchanted world are also a bit complicated. Her mother is on her death bed, and while she’s learning to live with it, her brother is using her cerebral palsy as a way to underestimate her abilities. Harper knows better, though. She’s tough and she knows what it takes to survive. But will those skills come to good use when she is drawn into a magical realm while helping a stranger on her home turf in Washington, DC? Do Rhen and Harper have it in them to break each other’s curse?  

A Curse So Dark and Lonely was written by Brigid Kemmerer, a YA author who focuses on fantasy, sci-fi, and the supernatural. She was inspired to write this book when thinking about the background characters of Beauty and the Beast, and what they are up to while the whole story is taking place. In an interview with the Los Angeles Public Library, Kemmerer said, “I always found myself wondering what was going on with the rest of the kingdom. The royal family had basically disappeared! What were people thinking? What were the subjects doing to survive? Once I started to explore that, the country of Emberfall came together.” 

You can read Gabrielle-Suzanne Barbot de Villeneuve’s original “Beauty and the Beast” here (Translated by J. R Planché).  

 

Snow White has been exiled. Only in this book, she’s known as Lorelai, and she’s much tougher than she looks. Cast out by the wicked Queen Irina after her father is murdered and his crown taken, Princess Lorelai knows that she has to use the only weapon she has that will match Irina’s – Magic. But in a neighboring kingdom, Prince Kol’s father and older brother are killed by an invading army of magic-wielding ogres, and he is left alone to save his kingdom. He knows that he needs to make powerful allies – preferably ones with magic – and thus he becomes Queen Irina’s huntsman. Irina tells Kol that she will give him magic in exchange for Lorelai’s heart. He doesn’t expect her to fight back, though, and in a battle of passion and wit, they find themselves catching feelings for one another, though neither wants to lose sight of their goals.  

Snow White was first published by The Brothers Grimm in their collection of fairy tales, aptly titled Grimm’s Fairy Tales and it tells a much darker story of the princess and the evil queen. You can read (or listen to) the story here.  

It would be a shame if I left Marissa Meyer off this list, who mainly writes YA fairy tale retellings. In the third installment of her Lunar Chronicles series, Cress, we have the story of Rapunzel (known as the titular Cress in this series), who has been imprisoned on a satellite from a young age, with nothing but tech screens surrounding her. In turn, this has made Cress an excellent hacker, though her hacking skills are not always used for good. Queen Levana has ordered Cress to track down Cinder, all while Cinder is attempting to free Cress from her dystopian prison and give Cress the freedom she deserves.  

Marissa Meyer was inspired to write her Lunar Chronicles series, which is a dystopian YA fairy tale retelling series, through multiple sources – the original fairy tales themselves, sci-fi movies like Star Wars, and TV shows like Firefly. To the Guardian in 2016, Meyer said, “I was frequently inspired by the technology of today, as well as news stories and magazine articles regarding where we are heading with technology, artificial intelligence, space exploration, and cybernetics. I was inspired by history – revolutions and the fall of dynasties, the civil rights movement, the bubonic plague. It goes on and on. Inspiration is everywhere.” 

You can read the original Rapunzel story, first published again by the Brothers Grimm in their Grimm’s Fairy Tales book, and it again has a much darker vibe than the more contemporarily beloved story. You can read (or listen to) the story here

If you’re interested in more fairy tale retellings, retellings in general, alternate history, or possibly reading up on the dark origins of some of your favorite fairy tales, then do we have the resources for you! Just click the links throughout this paragraph and you’ll find where you need to be.  

Taylor S.

By day, Taylor is your run of the mill, cardigan-wearing librarian, but by night, she is a cross-stitching, history-loving, classic-movie-watching baker who is carrying on a continuous attempt to sew her own capsule wardrobe. She is probably reading two or three books at any given time.


This press release was produced by the Public Library of Youngstown & Mahoning County. The views expressed here are the author’s own.

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