I'm not a huge reader of
fairytale retellings but I am endlessly fascinated by the idea. I
don't read them that much for the same reason I don't read
fanfiction: I tend to like my own interpretations the best. Eh...
However, I feel a lot less guilty interpreting characters that are
thought to be somewhat common property, more like part of some common
literary consciousness than actual characters. In most cases they
appear to be archetypes, symbols or roles rather than human beings.
And that's why they're a big part of my foundation in writing. I do
write actual retellings sometimes, but more than that I just feel
like I'm constantly interacting with classical fairytales as a writer
and a reader.
I love to see how a character carries
the ”spirit” of a famous fairytale character. I love it when a
character has aspects of many of them. It doesn't really matter if
it's intentional or not, I like to play with those thoughts anyway
and find new meaning and relationships between what I'm reading or
writing and the ideas in fairytales. I can't help but think about
Cinderella and The Little Mermaid, when I'm reading
about Fanny Price in Mansfield Park. I'm
always reminded of Little Red Riding Hood
in The Hound of the Baskervilles. I
find Snow White and Rose Red
in The Hunger Games. And
I'm aware that most likely none of the connections I find were
intentional and I admit that in the allegorical realm my thoughts are
very likely to go a bit over board. That's probably one of the
reasons why my head makes up stories. If the connection I make
between separate stories seemingly only exists in my head, then there
obviously is another story somewhere between the old ones that still
needs to be written. That being said, I'm probably not clueless about
when the author has made
the connection intentionally, either.
Recently, I've been writing a
collection of short stories, some more and some less based on
fairytales. So, that's were all of this is actually coming from. I
noticed I was instinctively using pretty distinct types of retelling
and interpreting, so I might as well write about that. There's
probably going to be some overlap and it's likely that most books
will fit into more than one category, but... I'm just writing this
for my own reflection. And who knows, maybe this list will benefit
someone else as well.
The rest will contain spoilers.
1. Expansion
This type is probably fit for those who
excel at writing settings and characters, since plot-wise it's not
meant to be surprising. If you think of the original fairytale as
puppet theather, this type of retelling is going to take that exact
piece and make it into a full-lenght movie instead. The point is to
tell the same story but make it somehow deeper, more detailed, more
nuanced. To bring out actual persons from the cardboard characters,
actual worlds from the vague fairytale lands. If the plot is very
simple it might be made more complicated, but essentially the story
remains the same from beginning to end.
Whether or not I like reading these
comes down to the characters. But if you can turn Sleeping Beauty
into a person from a plot device, I'm all in. I think it really takes
talent to write this type of story as if it was all original, when
basically everything from the fairytale is kept the way it is.
I think some good examples of this type
are The Goose Girl by Shannon
Hale and Tender Morsels
by Margo Lanagan. Both are great books in my opinion and if you're
not too familiar with the tales of Goose Girl, or Snow White and Rose
Red, I actually recommend you to read these books before the original
tales. Because they follow the original in such detail, they don't
require any knowledge of them, and that way there's a lot more
suspence.
Maybe, depending on your preferences,
the fact that this type follows the fairytale can be the book's
greatest strength or greatest weakness.
2. Twister
This type usually changes major aspects
of the original tale, sometimes only a few, sometimes more. What I
see as the point, or would set as the basic rule, is that the source
story is obviously recognizable without it being stated. That way the
contrast is greater in relation to the aspects that remain the same.
The whole story may be born from one question, like: What if
Little Red Riding Hood was the wolf? What if Cinderella's stepsister
managed to fool the prince? Or
it may be inspired by a notion that something in the original story
isn't quite believable, or doesn't apply to our time, or would be
just too hilarious the other way around, or is always one
way so that's a reason enough for it to be another way. One way or
another, it makes twists to the original tale.
I think these
stories have a danger to fall short if the writer is only interested
in their twists and the rest of the story is left underdeveloped
because it's not that interesting. This type will probably work the
best if you are as intrigued by the original story as you are by your
new idea, and use it to strengthen the original in some way.
The simplest example in this category
would probably be something like Disney's Little Mermaid,
although there's hardly much thought behind changing the ending so
that the mermaid gets the prince. Marissa Meyer's Cinder
(since I haven't read more of the Lunar Chronicles)
is a better example. It's
definitely Cinderella, the
story is there, but almost every aspect of it is twisted in one way
or another. Starting from Cinder being a cyborg.
3. Translation
These can seem really similar to the
Twister type, but the point isn't in making the story different from
the original, but ”translating” it into another world, time or
context as analogically as possible. I have to admit this is one of
my two personal favourites. I especially like ”the modern day
adaptations”, when they're done well, and I can't count the times I
have written them myself, based on fairytales but also on other
classics, such as Shakespeare's plays.
The danger with these stories is that
they might get stuck on a level where they're entertaining but
nothing more. This usually happens when the cleverness of the
analogies becomes the main focus: the story falls flat because it's
just a replica of the original, there's no deeper meaning behind why
the story needed to be transferred to another realm. Ideally, every
analogy should be there because it says more/other things than the
original story, without changing the storyline.
I think the movie Cinderella Story
is a good example of this,
though my memory of it isn't very clear. I think the glass slipper
was changed into an MP3 player and the ”prince” of the school
tried to find the girl by asking which songs were first on the
playlist.
4. Blanks Filled In
This is the other favourite of mine!
It's similar to ”Expansion” but somewhat less loyal to the
original story, in the sense that it doesn't change a thing about its
basic plot, but it takes complete freedom everywhere where the
original doesn't reach. Wherever things are left untold, there's a
blank canvas for this type of retelling. With enough blanks filled
in, the whole meaning, or interpretation of the story may change. The
Stepmother may not look so evil after all, or the prince may not turn
out to be as Charming as you'd think.
The trap with this type is
overanalyzing. There definitely is such a thing as too much
interpretation. It's not going to look very convincing if it seems
that everything that looks like one thing in the fairytale, is going
to turn out to be the exact opposite in the retelling. Contrast here
is as important as ever.
The
movie/book Red Riding Hood is
mostly this type. The original tale has a pretty minor part in it,
but it's all there. What happens before Red Riding Hood goes into the
woods with the basket, and why the wolf is interested in her in the
first place are the main focus of the story.
5. Story Inside a Story
This is basically when an insignificant
part of a tale inspires their own story. Often it is a minor
character. This can easily get so far from the original it's not
really a retelling anymore but I think it qualifies when the plot of
the fairytale is observable from the context of the story, even if
it's happening away from the time and place of the original. Also,
this may often be basically the same thing as the ”Blanks Filled
In” or even ”Expansion” but I think it deserves it's own
category because its focus is more singular.
The hard part in this type is how
integrated it should be with the characters, the setting, or the plot
of the original story. Common ground is important, but the story
should probably be able to stand on it's own too.
I've
failed to think of actual fairytale retellings of this type, so let's
go with Lavinia by
Ursula Le Guin (based on The Aeneid). Lavinia is only briefly mentioned in her husband's story but in this book she has a whole life.
These are the five basic categories I
could come up with. Someone might want to add categories that I have
excluded, so here's some of them:
Cross-overs, like Wildwood Dancing
by Juliet Marillier. The story
mixes elements from The Twelve Dancing Princesses and
The Frog Prince but I
think it makes more sense to analyze it as ”Blanks Filled In” or
an ”Expansion”. The fact that there's elements from more than one
fairytale seems less relevant within these types of categories.
Stories that use allegory, like As
Red As Blood by Salla Simukka.
There's definitely a lot of elements from both Snow White
and the Seven Dwarves and Snow
White and Rose Red but the story
would make total sense without the reader ever noticing the
parallels. These types are not really retellings.
Stories that are ”off-springs” of a
fairytale, like Throne of Glass by
Sarah J. Maas. Apparently, this book started as a retelling of
Cinderella and you can
see the parallels especially in the beginning, but it takes it's own
course pretty fast and as the story develops it pretty much has
nothing to do with Cinderella
anymore, so...
That's
all I have for now! I do enjoy this topic and there's some fairytale
retellings out there I'm quite eager to read... so, untill future
explorations!
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