I'm super excited to have the fantastic A.B. Keuser on my blog today talking about her favorite fairytale retellings. I'm visiting her blog with my top five urban fantasy worlds! Please stop on by and let me know yours.
My Top 5 Favorite
Retellings
By A. B. Keuser
Firstly, thanks for having me on your blog today,
Christine!
I love fairytales. They were some of the first stories I can remember
hearing, and I grew up in a golden age of Disney movies. Beauty and the beast may be the first film I
ever saw in the decade’s old Egyptian themed theater of my home town (if it wasn’t I can’t remember
what was). Fairytales have the opportunity to do so many things. They’ve been told in ways that make
them beautiful and sweet; they’ve also been told in ways that should strike terror in the hearts of twelve
year olds. Whether the Disney-fied version or a tale pulled from the Grimm’s collection, Fairytales have
a way of getting in your head, and sticking with you.
1. When Beauty Tamed the Beast by Eloisa James
In this Historical Romance, the Beast in question is a lord/doctor with
a beastly temperament who is more resembling of Gregory House than of the furry beast of the Disney
variety. The story itself leans more toward its historical romance side than its roots in the fairytale, but
Eloisa did a wonderful job of blending in just the right amount of fairytale to remind the reader while
keeping it grounded in a reality of a different time. The rest of her fairytales series are amusing reads as
well, though this is my favorite of them.
This is actually a late addition to the list. I only finished it two weeks
ago. That being said, this delightful YA SF retelling of Cinderella is spectacular. A fully formed world that is completely different from the original tale
with all the elements of the original. The story is sweet, frustrating, and an absolute joy to
read.
Sure this is technically cheating. But it’s a miniseries so good, I
couldn’t help but add it. There’s something absolutely wonderful about this update of Alice in
Wonderland, where humans are “Oysters” being drained of their emotions to supply the citizens of
wonderland with drug versions of the emotions they themselves do not have. Mechanical flamingos that
are the equivalent of a airborne jet ski. The Queen of Hearts runs a casino. It’s absurd and delightful.
Some could argue (and the mini-series sort of does too) that it’s not a true retelling but it has all the
elements I look for in a retelling.

Another historical romance and another take on the Cinderella story.
This book has no prince and no magic, but manages to play off the basic ideas of the original story in a
way that lends just the right touch of familiarity. That’s not to say that it doesn’t take you on a wild ride
to get there. Though I still take issue with the hero (because he’s a bull headed idiot), Sophie makes up
for him in spades. A wicked step mother, an ugly(personality-wise) stepsister and sweet one too. This
doesn’t need fairies to make magic of it’s own.

This made it onto the list with a caveat. The first time I read the book
(2011) I hated it. The second go-around, it grew on
me. This retelling of Sleeping Beauty takes a pseudo-medieval twist on the classic that gives a fun play
on a variety of magic. The only downside (and perhaps what made me dislike it in the first place) was the
romance element that just didn’t seem right to me. Perhaps my favorite part of this novel was the way
in which Robin handled the fairy’s gifts, each is a delightful thing that goes just a bit
wrong.
What are your favorite fairytale
retellings?
About the
Author:
When A. B. Keuser isn't trying to make sense of her own brain soup, she writes the "charmingly
gritty" Flynn
Monroe series, space operas that will keep you guessing,
and steamy Clockwork Fairytales. An Oregon native whose life has
transplanted her in the Sonoran desert - where she's slowly desiccating - she writes to stay out of the
sun and heat, drinks way too much tea and spends all her free time with her dog and husband.
Give her a shout: