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Task 15: A Book That Is a Re-Telling of A Classic Story
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Book Riot
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Dec 16, 2014 09:48AM

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Percy Jackson series
Edited: I decided to use books already on my tbr shelf so no Winter for me (for this category anyway) but Percy Jackson still applies.
Actually there are quite a few interesting retelling a that I want to read so this one will be easy.




I might read that one as my retelling too


I loved that book!


I'm excited for this category! I have dozens of retellings on my shelves at home, this should be the easiest one for me!


Agreed!

Great book!



this has been on my TBR forever!!


Me, too. It's been on my TBR list forever!

Thinking The Sleeper and the Spindlewill be mine for this category.

this has been on my TBR forever!!"
I think you would like it!

I enjoyed that one.

If you like YA fairy tale retellings in the fantasy genre, I highly recommend Robin McKinley.





I have read all Fforde's Thursday Next series (to date) and had started Shades of Gray (which I am having trouble getting in to) but saw someone had mentioned in one of the threads here The Big Over Easy and thought it's time I started it. It is now my favourite Fforde book.
I may have to find some of the other books suggested in here as a lot of them sound like good books


I hope that counts?"
I loved this book. I had to stop reading it in public I kept laughing out loud.

I read that book this past spring too. Oyeyemi has such a unique writing style. I felt mixed on the ending, but to me, I can still really like a book even if I didn't love how it ended. It's a great selection for this category!


Oh I am so excited by this!!! You have made my week. I'm a huuuuuge Mr. Darcy fan. Thank you, thank you, thank you!

Oh I am so excited by this!!! You ..."
Glad to help! It really is a nice read.



Percy Jackson series
Edited: I decided to use books already on my tbr shelf so no Winter for me (for this category anyway) but Percy Jackson st..."
Winter is still my plan for this category, but I have a bad feeling it's release is going to get pushed back til January 2016.


I was sick with the flu when I posted this, and am now feeling better enough to realize that I didn't clarify my question well enough to yield answers (or at least, I think that's the reason why).
I wasn't sure if Phillip Pullman was re-telling the Grimm tales as his own take on them (such as Angela Carter's absolutely wonderful The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories - Wolf-Alice, anyone??) or as a kind of No-Fear Shakespeare sort of thing.
I received the Pullman as a Christmas gift, and intend to read it (and quite happily, too, as I love fairy tales), but for this challenge, I would prefer to read something that's more of a re-invention than a re-hashing (for lack of a better term). Skimming through the book now, it seems to be the latter, with a short essay following the stories on his opinion of them.
Looking at the posts above, I might go with Boy, Snow, Bird, The Snow Child, or The Once and Future King.
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Marissa Meyer (other topics)Renée Ahdieh (other topics)
Frank Beddor (other topics)
Jean Rhys (other topics)
Helen Oyeyemi (other topics)
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