Flash Fiction Challenge: Fairy Tales, Remixed
Last week’s challenge: The Who, The Where, The Uh-Oh
Pick a fairy tale.
Go on, do it.
I’ll wait.
If you don’t know your fairy tales — Google is your friend, of course.
Hell, here’s a pretty good list of the Grimm’s tales.
I want you to pick one — I’ll let you do that — and rewrite it.
Except, wait now, hold on.
I want you to also roll to choose a random subgenre. You will then apply said random subgenre to the fairy tale you have picked for maximum awesome. Get it? Got it? Rad.
You have 1000 words.
You have one week — due Friday, January 31st, noon, EST.
Write it at your online space. Link back here.
Do tell us which fairy tale you’re using by making it the title of your story.
Subgenre
(roll a d20 or go to a random number generator)
- Cyberpunk
- Dystopian
- Erotica
- Spy Thriller
- Southern Gothic
- Satire
- Urban Fantasy
- Space Horror
- Space Opera
- Young Adult Contemporary
- “Grimdark” Fantasy
- Psychological Horror
- Hard Sci-Fi
- Slasher Film
- Ecothriller
- Sword & Sorcery
- Lovecraftian
- Zombie Apocalypse
- Superhero
- Detective
January 30, 2014 @ 10:33 AM
My first attempt at a remixed story, and a slasher film. Hope I pulled it off.
http://missykierstead.blogspot.com/2014/01/rumpelstiltskin.html
February 1, 2014 @ 7:15 PM
This was soooooooo good. You definitely pulled it off. I might have nightmares! 🙂
February 2, 2014 @ 9:42 PM
Thanks so much for reading and commenting! Is it bad that I would like for you to have nightmares from my story?
February 3, 2014 @ 7:53 AM
Nah. Slasher films are supposed to give you nightmares. If they don’t make you feel like you have to laugh and throw popcorn at the screen so no one notices how jumped and quietly whimpered when the bad guy popped up, they’re doing it wrong.
Hansel and Gretel: Grimmdark Fantasy | Postcards from El Salvador
January 30, 2014 @ 10:33 AM
[…] Another Flash Fiction challenge from Chuck Wendig: http://terribleminds.com/ramble/2014/01/24/flash-fiction-challenge-fairy-tales-remixed/ […]
January 30, 2014 @ 10:38 AM
I wasn’t planning on taking this week’s challenge, but when I rolled “Grimdark fantasy” I just couldn’t help myself. Anyway, here’s the end result: “Hansel and Gretel: Grimmdark Fantasy”
http://johnfreeter.wordpress.com/2014/01/30/hansel-and-gretel-grimmdark-fantasy/
January 30, 2014 @ 1:00 PM
Okay, this is my first ever go, both at a Chuck Wendig Challenge AND flash fiction of 1,000 words or less. And of course I’ve now looked at everyone else’s and gone “Awww, they’re all soooo much better than mine – I suuuuuuucccck…”
*Stops. Thinks. Pulls out pen and writes “Note to self: in future, don’t do own PR.*
Anyway, I made the deadline AND stuck to the 1,000-word limit, so I’ll allow myself a minor ‘Yay, go me’ for that. I picked ‘Cinderella’ and I rolled ‘Detective’ for my subgenre. And here is my link:
http://wcprawncrackers.blogspot.co.uk/2014_01_01_archive.html
January 31, 2014 @ 2:30 AM
We are always our own harshest critics. Say shhh to the mean little inner voice. I’m coming back tomorrow to read. 🙂 Sounds like an interesting combo!
January 31, 2014 @ 12:20 PM
Loved it! “Landing barges” haha!
January 31, 2014 @ 8:57 PM
You did well Wendy! You really got the cocky detective voice down. 🙂
February 1, 2014 @ 3:50 PM
Wow! Thanks reading and for the great feedback – especially after I sold it so crappily as well 😉
And now I’m gonna go read me some more of the others here… sooo many talented writers here…
February 1, 2014 @ 7:28 PM
Great retelling. I love the voice.
February 1, 2014 @ 11:47 PM
Great voice, and I love the gumshoe setting. The detail about the stepsister with the dye job is priceless. I’d been wondering what I’d do if I rolled “detective” — not my genre at all. The way you told your story is how I would’ve wanted to tell it, but doubt I’d be able to. You did it well!
The Emperor’s New Clothes | Fabulously Fast Fables
January 30, 2014 @ 4:38 PM
[…] – Terrible Minds (http://terribleminds.com/ramble/2014/01/24/flash-fiction-challenge-fairy-tales-remixed/) decided to run a short story challenge this week where people had to take a well known fairy tale […]
January 30, 2014 @ 4:45 PM
“The Emperor’s New Clothes” remixed in hopefully a satirical way…. Fantastic challenge. 🙂
http://wp.me/p4aU9d-S
January 30, 2014 @ 4:57 PM
My fairy tale was Red Riding Hood and I ended up with the detective genre, although I kind of bent it at the end – http://shawnlealos.net/fiction/1272/red-riding-hood-short-story
January 30, 2014 @ 6:58 PM
I chose “The Little Mermaid” and the random number generator gave me a 20 (Detective) for my subgenre. The story ran off in an unexpected direction on me and I had a hard time getting it down to 1000 words, but here it finally is: http://reneeelizabeths.blogspot.com/2014/01/flash-fiction-fairy-tales-remixed.html
February 1, 2014 @ 5:13 PM
How ever did you come up with this idea? Such a creative twist on the original story. I really enjoyed this, even if it left me feeling a little sad at the end.
February 1, 2014 @ 5:34 PM
Thank you. I’m glad you liked it! 🙂
January 30, 2014 @ 8:30 PM
The Wolf-zombie apocalypse bears it’s teeth at the Three Little Pigs.
http://www.johnrickett.com/?p=14
January 30, 2014 @ 9:54 PM
My fairy tale was The Billy Goats Gruff with the detective subgenre. Loads of fun 🙂 http://wp.me/p3McUV-2o
Billy Goats Gruff | Heather Milne Johnson
January 30, 2014 @ 9:54 PM
[…] for the latest terribleminds challenge. This one is called Fairy Tales Remixed. You take a fairy tale and a random sub-genre […]
January 30, 2014 @ 10:05 PM
This was a bit hard, and I totally had to fudge everything–the selection process AND the length, which is about 225 words over.
http://www.ninjalibrarian.com/2014/01/flash-fiction-friday-trapped-aboard.html
January 31, 2014 @ 2:29 AM
Me too Rebecca. Mine would just not tell itself in 1000 words. I may have to rewrite it for fun submission somewhere else sometime… Somewhere without a limit of 1000 words…
February 1, 2014 @ 1:03 AM
Yeah, to my surprise I came up with something that can stand on it’s own, and could go in the longer version into a short-story collection that’s percolating in the back of my mind.
February 2, 2014 @ 12:11 AM
Very creative and entertaining! I wouldn’t have thought of making Rapunzel the guinea pig for beauty experiments. Nice touch! I enjoyed this, and I bet it was fun to write. : )
January 30, 2014 @ 11:35 PM
I chose a lesser-known Grimm’s tale, just to flex my muscles on an out-there type of story: “Our Lady’s Child.” You can find the original here: http://www.grimmstories.com/en/grimm_fairy-tales/our_ladys_child
My version, a hard sci-fi, is living here: http://writingcyborg.blogspot.com/2014/01/our-ladys-child.html
February 2, 2014 @ 6:34 PM
So, apparently Blogger ate my last post. New link is here: http://writingcyborg.blogspot.com/2014/01/our-lady-child.html
Still not sure what I think of it. Not my first attempt at flash fiction, but I do feel…maybe, one of my better? I don’t know. Having a difficult time objectively judging this one.
Flash Fiction: The Star-Money | We Love The Stars Too Fondly
January 31, 2014 @ 12:55 AM
[…] week’s Flash Fiction Challenge from Chuck Wendig is appropriately bizarre. (I like it!) I rolled a seventeen, so I get to write a […]
January 31, 2014 @ 12:58 AM
This was deliciously vile, just what I needed for my mood tonight.
I rolled a seventeen, which is “Lovecraftian”. I found a Grimm tale called “The Star-Money” which was chipper and upbeat with a happy ending. It’s not that way any more. Enjoy!
http://pauljwillett.com/2014/01/30/flash-fiction-the-star-money/
January 31, 2014 @ 2:26 AM
This is too much fun! I chose a Russian fairytale (I wanted to broaden my fairy tale palate from the Grimm Brothers) called The Firebird and Princess Vasilisa and gave it a little dystopian fun. It’s a little over (300 words :/) but I didn’t have time to do any real edits. And I wanted to get it up on time one week in January! Winning!
Here it is, hope you enjoy it guys: http://prose.smoph.org/2014/01/30/the-firebird-and-princess-vasilisa-dystopian-worlds/
Looking forward to what everyone else got up to tomorrow!
February 1, 2014 @ 1:13 AM
That was good. And I read the one from last week, too, as long as I was there, and liked it even better.
February 1, 2014 @ 6:09 PM
Thanks Rebecca! I was pretty late with that one, so it didn’t get much of an audience. It was good because I learnt a bit about the Chinatown here in Vancouver, where I’m living.
February 1, 2014 @ 3:41 PM
What a great idea to pick a Russian fairytale for the challenge. And Firebird’s one of my favs! Well done.
February 1, 2014 @ 6:11 PM
Yeah, I have to admit, I didn’t know much about the Firebird in Russian fairytales, so did a bit of reading. It’s an amazing theme, a trademark for a quest. I love fairytales, and I am going to have to read more I think.
February 1, 2014 @ 8:37 PM
Very nice, with the moral still intact. We’ll done!
February 4, 2014 @ 2:52 AM
Thanks John.
February 2, 2014 @ 12:36 AM
Okay, so I remember watching a cartoon movie of this story when I was a kid. Ever since I saw you mention it here, I’ve been scouring the internet to find something about that movie, but I’ve come up with nada. It’s driving me crazy!
But. I like your twist on it the story! If I remember correctly, the original tells that the king gets boiled alive and the Huntsman marries Vasilisa. But I think I enjoy her as a schemer staging a coup! Yeah, I feel bad for the Huntsman…but maybe being a bird won’t be so bad. ; ) Great job!
February 2, 2014 @ 7:31 PM
Yeah, you’re right but I wrote the marriage out of the ending because, hey, it’s a new world, and I’m sick of women being the prize. Yay empowerment!
I did feel bad about the Huntsman, but I figured he gets freedom instead of being used by everyone for all the rest of his life. And that maybe that was her kindness to him.
Interestingly, both the Firebird and Vasilisa are Russian fairytale staples, so I feel they’ll meet again. Firebird is the signal for or initiation of a quest, while Vasilisa is the pure woman done over by hardship.
January 31, 2014 @ 2:28 AM
Also, for anyone also looking for other fairytales, Wikipedia was my friend for the list of well known fairytales from several cultures (mostly European, but at least there were some others!).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fairy_tales
[FridayFlash] Sleeping Beauty’s Secret | Elizabethan Theatre
January 31, 2014 @ 6:20 AM
[…] my first #fridayflash story of 2014, I’m taking part in Chuck Wendig’s Fairytales Remixed challenge (subgenre: “grimdark fantasy”). I actually already had this story in mind when his […]
January 31, 2014 @ 6:23 AM
I chose Sleeping Beauty (blame all those Maleficent trailers) with subgenre “grimdark fantasy.” Thanks for the extra motivation to get this idea into words! I love fairytales, so I’m looking forward to checking everyone else’s stories!
http://elizabethditty.com/2014/01/31/fridayflash-sleeping-beautys-secret/
#FlashForFriday – Terribleminds Fairy Tale Flash Fiction Challenge | The Torn Page - A K Hinchey's Writing Blog
January 31, 2014 @ 6:44 AM
[…] week I mentioned that that I was attempting a flash fiction challenge set me by my wonderful author friend J S Collyer. In this you had to pick a fairy tale to rewrite […]
January 31, 2014 @ 6:47 AM
Here’s my attempt ‘Cin’ and I got sword and sorcery. I hope it’s entertaining and I hope you enjoy 🙂 http://wp.me/p252mM-Cw
January 31, 2014 @ 6:53 AM
OK, here it is: http://just50000words.blogspot.ca/2014/01/rumpel-redux.html. Rumpel Redux, based on Rumpelstiltskin in the detective genre. As I mentioned in the intro on my blog, the story was easy enough once I got going but the 1,000 word limit was the bigger test for me. I’ve been rewriting, tweaking, excising all week but it’s time to just walk away. Ready for the next challenge.
January 31, 2014 @ 9:50 AM
Here is my retelling of “The Old Witch” set in a dystopian world http://melissasosburn.wordpress.com/2014/01/31/the-old-witch/
Goldilocks and the Three Bears – flash fiction challenge - Nate Writes Stuff
January 31, 2014 @ 10:24 AM
[…] (Challenge via here) […]
January 31, 2014 @ 10:30 AM
“Goldilocks and the Three Bears” as a grimdark fantasy:
http://natewritesstuff.com/2014/01/goldilocks-and-the-three-bears-flash-fiction-challenge/
January 31, 2014 @ 10:39 AM
Here is an alternative ending to “Puss in Boots”, told as psychological horror. http://rtwilder.wordpress.com/2014/01/31/under-his-boots/
January 31, 2014 @ 11:05 AM
I guess technically mine is grimdark fantasy, rather than psychological horror, since I haven’t modernized the setting, and there is a talking cat that isn’t just talking in the p.o.v. character’s head.
January 31, 2014 @ 10:54 AM
The Little Match Girl. I’ll let the remix be a surprise…;)
http://sarieland.wordpress.com/2014/01/31/the-little-match-girl-reanimated/
January 31, 2014 @ 9:03 PM
Good idea for updating it. I had a similar link in my head (as one I wanted to write too, after I had an idea trawling through the fairytales). Good one.
January 31, 2014 @ 10:57 AM
Here it is! Just made the deadline! Wrote it this morning…http://mmcnellis.com/2014/01/31/the-little-mermaid-and-the-undead-merfolk/
Flash Fiction Challenge: The Shipwrecked Sailor | Ex Libris Bookewyrme
January 31, 2014 @ 11:39 AM
[…] Wendig’s flash-fiction challenge for this past week was to choose a fairy tale and re-write it in a new style, choosing from a list of possibles on […]
January 31, 2014 @ 11:41 AM
Forgot to post this yesterday, so just slipping in under the wire.
I decided to go a little bit different direction, and I rewrote an Ancient Egyptian fairy tale in a Sword & Sorcery style.
So here is “The Shipwrecked Sailor”: http://bookewyrme.straydreamers.com/flash-fiction-challenge-the-shipwrecked-sailor/
January 31, 2014 @ 12:09 PM
Um, I posted on Wednesday, but forgot to link back here.
Puss in Boots, superhero style.
http://amandahelms.com/2014/01/29/puss-in-boots/
January 31, 2014 @ 1:47 PM
Fashionably late? Sleeping Beauty: Cyberpunk Remix here.
http://irrationalconduct.blogspot.co.uk/2014/01/sleeping-beauty-cyberpunk-remix.html
February 2, 2014 @ 12:53 AM
Left a comment on your blog, but wanted to mention it here, too: I enjoyed this, especially the twist of giving “Beauty” more control over the story! : )
Godfather Death « Feigning a Fine Fettle
January 31, 2014 @ 2:44 PM
[…] was a writing exercise from Terribleminds, Chuck Wendig’s blog. The challenge was to take a fairy tale, in this case the Brothers Grimm […]
Flash Fiction Challenge: Fairy Tales Remixed | Half-Mad Rantings with Nick Egelhoff
January 31, 2014 @ 2:46 PM
[…] week’s challenge was to take a fairy tale and spin it anew by throwing a different genre onto the traditional […]
January 31, 2014 @ 2:48 PM
I rolled “cyberpunk” and decided upon “The Three Little Men in the Wood”:
http://nickegelhoff.com/2014/01/31/flash-fiction-challenge-fairy-tales-remixed/
January 31, 2014 @ 2:52 PM
Well I’m a bit late, but here it is:
http://mrdorough.wordpress.com/2014/01/31/godfather-death/
I went with the fairy tale “Godfather Death” and the subgenre “Dystopian.”
P.S. In reading Brothers Grimm fairy tales, I found that most of them are the dark, rambling tales of a drunken uncle. I kind of think that “Grimdark Fantasy” is just an invitation to copy and paste.
January 31, 2014 @ 4:00 PM
Hey people, i chose the juniper tree because of its bloodshed, and finished the zombie apocalypse version of it JUST before the due date.
January 31, 2014 @ 8:58 PM
Gina! Your link? 🙂
The Fairy Tale, Remixed Flash Fiction Challenge | Trine Toft Schmidt
January 31, 2014 @ 6:23 PM
[…] Chuck’s challenge this week was fun. Take a fairy tale and rewrite it any way you see fit. Only requirement: pick a genre and apply it to said fairy tale. […]
January 31, 2014 @ 6:26 PM
Being late to the party is apparently my thing now. There’s a new challenge to write and I haven’t even looked at it yet. So I’ll just throw this one into the ether.
I rolled Urban Fantasy and chose Grimm’s Pied Piper of Hamelin.
Hamelin City Blues:
http://www.trinetoftschmidt.com/2014/01/the-fairy-tale-remixed-flash-fiction-challenge/
February 4, 2014 @ 2:53 AM
So I did one more, The Little Matchgirl http://prose.smoph.org/2014/02/03/the-little-matchgirl-zombie-dreaming/
Not sure if anyone is still reading through, but just in case.
Fairy Tales and Sub Genres | Word Grrls
February 5, 2014 @ 9:50 AM
[…] Flash Fiction Challenge: Fairy Tales, Remixed « terribleminds: chuck wendig. Share this:MoreGoogle+ Laura BrownLike this:Like Loading…Google+ […]