Into the Woods
If that phrase conjures up image of Disney Princesses and
happy endings then you’re missing out on the delightfully dark aspects of fairy
tales. The ones that come with the original versions of the stories, where
sinister woodlands held wicked witches, vengeful spirits, cannibalistic queens,
murderous ogres and all manner of things out to kill you. Even the princes had
a sinister edge, with not-so-charming intentions.
Now I love the Disney animated films, but my childhood
involved reading more nasty versions, namely Grimm’s Fairy Tales. These are the
stories that bite, where menacing things prowl in the darkness, behind the
trees and even invade your home. In these stories bad things happened, and even
the happy endings could seem rather imperfect.
These stories had a spooky ambience and a lurid nature, dark
and dripping in blood and terror, but being a main character in one of these
fairy tales wasn't easy. A walk in the woods could get you eaten by wolves,
captured by witches (who wanted to cook and eat you) or turned into some kind
of animal. Even family wasn't safe. Step-mothers, mothers-in-law, fathers and
siblings could all conspire to kill you. They could be hungry for your flesh,
jealous of your beauty, or just greedy for your gold.
And those Not-So-Charming Princes I mentioned? Well, they
tended to scoop up their Princesses without so much as a by-your-leave (I mean
who whisks off girls they've just met in a forest?) and marched them to the altar
as quick as they could (or do even worse, as in the original Sleeping Beauty
tale). Happily ever after for these heroines often meant being forcibly snatched
from the life you knew and wedded to a stranger (and sometimes being persecuted
by his crazy witch mother).
So the next time you think of fairy tales, don't imagine
pretty princesses, shiver in horror. And
remember: death (and a witch) lurks
around every corner, family can't be trusted, and stay away from princes.
I hope you'll visit some of the other
hoppers (scroll down, way down, to find
the list) and don't forget to enter my Rafflecopter Contest.
I never liked princes and always considered myself a witch, so yeah, fairy tales are NOT always glitter and rainbows ;)
ReplyDeleteHappy Hopping!!
Nope, it's downright dangerous in those woods. Thanks for stopping by, Anne.
ReplyDeleteThe Grimm tales are so much better!
ReplyDeleteI, too, preferred the Grimm Tales.
ReplyDeleteOh yes, Grimm's are far better.
ReplyDeleteBut I still have a fondness for the Little Match Girl.
ReplyDeleteI have always been a Grimm girl myself! (Blogger hates me)
ReplyDeleteSheila, one of the book prizes in the contest has a redone steampunk version of a Little Match Girl.
ReplyDeleteI'm a Grimm girl too, Andersen's tales were too scary for me.
ReplyDeleteThanks for adding your blog to the Coffin Hop. So many generous authors and only so many hours in a day!
ReplyDeleteHey, A.F. I can't believe I had yet to follow you on Twitter! *slaps hand*
ReplyDeleteI'm so bad! If it were me, I would love to bump into the Disney kind of girl out in the deep dark woods; however, none of my characters get to be so lucky. :)
Have a great weekend, and Happy Coffin Hopping!
-Jimmy
http://jamesgarciajr.blogspot.com/2013/10/a-multitude-of-halloween-giveaways.html
Thanks for stopping by Lori.
ReplyDeleteGood thing those Disney girls don't meet my characters, they probably wouldn't survive. Thanks for popping in, James.
ReplyDeleteI love how you portray the fairy tale. It is not a pretty scene.
ReplyDeleteI'm a Grimms and Andersen fan from way back.
Thanks Aspen. Those original fairy tales are delightfully dark.
ReplyDeleteIt is surprising how dark, and adult the original Grimm Tales are. Like the wicked stepsisters cutting their feet to fit in the slipper in "Cinderella" or, as you mentioned, how The Prince in "Sleeping Beauty" is essentially a date rapist. Not for young kids, but compelling, edgy, horrorish tales!
ReplyDeleteYes, fairy tales are originally folklore and mythology, so they should have an edge of horror.
ReplyDelete