Play Book Tag discussion
June 2019: Retellings
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Announcing the June Tag

I was just about to make some recommendations and that was going to be my first one!
So... ones that made my favourites the years I read them include a few different volumes of the Fables graphic novel series, including volume 1, so start with:
Fables, Vol. 1: Legends in Exile / Bill Willingham
Also:
Cindy Ella / Robin Palmer (YA)
Mirror Mirror: A Book of Reverso Poems / Marlyn Singer
Wildwood Dancing / Juliet Marillier
Hmmm, I thought I'd also see this one my list. I thought it made my favourites when I read it, but maybe not, however it's one of the first that came to my head, so I'm going to recommend it, anyway:
The Snow Child / Eowyn Ivey

East of Eden- a retelling of Cain and Abel
Everything Under- a retelling of Oedipus Rex
A Thousand Acres- a retelling of King Lear
Home Fire- a retelling of Antigone.
What I might read:
Baba Yaga Laid an Egg
Till We Have Faces
Gingerbread
Or, whatever looks good, because I have a lot of retellings on my shelves. I love a good treatment of a story I loved!

East of Eden- a retelling of Cain and Abel
Everything Under- a retelling of Oedipus Rex
A Thousand Acres- a retelling of King Lear
[b..."
Oooh, I forgot about [book:Gingerbread|40634915]! I have that on my nightstand as I bought it recently.
Also any of the Austen Project.


East of Eden- a retelling of Cain and Abel
Everything Under- a retelling of Oedipus Rex
A Thousand Acres- a retelling of King Lear
[b..."
What's [book:Baba Yaga Laid an Egg|6011268] a retelling of? I also have The Story Of Edgar Sawtelle,Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, Dawn of the DreadfulsDreadfully Ever After and Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters all sitting on my physical book shelf so any suggestions welcome.

Oh I was thinking that was an original, duh. I was thinking of putting the series on my TRIM list. I'd like to at least read the first book to see if I like it."
Interesting. Is it an original? Some of these books that are the seminal works that commemorate legends or myths are hard to really categorize. The story of King Arthur has been around for centuries, well before White's novel. But, is White's book really a retelling or is it really just a straight-forward recording of the tale?

Also from Hogarth Shakespeare (that I have) are:
[book:New Boy|3170625..."
I'm actually not doing horizons challenge, so I won't get to get to experience the high of hitting the trifecta, but if I was doing horizons this would not fit... I don't know the setting but feel strongly it isn't Greece.
If I have time I might try to knock out Hag-seed as well.

Geekerella (fun, young adult contemporary romance)
For Darkness Shows the Stars (science fiction retelling of Austen's [book..."
I have read The Queens of Innis Lear and liked. It was her first attempt at Adult Fantasy and gave her a fourth star for the effort

😫😂🤣

There's a (very small) infograph that you can enlargen- breaks the retellings down to fairy tales, classics, Shakespeare, and mythology.
Down farther o..."
This is pure gold! Thanks Joi!

This tag seemed to be used mostly for fairytale retellings, and YA retellings at that. They don't interest me too much. But, there are other ways to apply ..."
I second The Red Tent-loved it

I swore I Would get through this thread without adding a another book...*Heavy Sigh .You got me with Wildwood Dancing

Oh I was thinking that was an original, duh. I was thinking of putting the series on my TRIM list. I'd like to a..."
It's marketed as "A Masterful Re-telling"

East of Eden- a retelling of Cain and Abel
Everything Under- a retelling of Oedipus Rex
A Thousand Acres- a retelling o..."
The Russian folk tales about Baba Yaga- an old woman/witch. It’s part of a series of folklore/mythology told with a modern twist. Another in the series is Weight: The Myth of Atlas and Heracles
Hi! Question for the mods!
One of the books I'm considering for this tag would fit Horizons as well. However, I haven't been participating in this challenge so should I just post in the 'retellings' folder or put it in the horizons folder as well? That's if I decide to read it of course!
One of the books I'm considering for this tag would fit Horizons as well. However, I haven't been participating in this challenge so should I just post in the 'retellings' folder or put it in the horizons folder as well? That's if I decide to read it of course!

I'll be reading reading The Secret Chord this month - a retelling of the life of King David (biblical).
IF I'm lucky, I'm also hoping to get my hands on a copy of Circe - which would fit both the retelling category as well as taking place in Greece for the Horizon's challenge! We'll see though, this one seems to still be in high demand and is on hold at my library - I have no idea how many people are ahead of me in line.

One of the books I'm considering for this tag would fit Horizons as well. However, I haven't been participating in this challenge so should I just post in the 'retellings' folder or put it in the horizons folder as well? That's if I decide to read it of course! ."
Jenny, if you read the book then definitely post it in both folders as you have described! Even if you aren't making a dedicated effort to read each month for Horizons—which is totally not a requirement—you'll pick up a few extra participation points by posting it there!

I'll be reading reading The Secret Chord this month - a retelling of the life of King David (biblical). "
I really enjoyed The Secret Chord. Are you familiar with the biblical story? I totally recommend giving it a quick wikipedia search and spend no more than 30 minutes reading about the biblical story in order to really enjoy the book more!
I did that as I only remembered the bare bones of the biblical story, and I think it really enhanced my enjoyment of The Secret Chord.

Y'all, I am just not as good as Anita, and in my attempt to help out yesterday I posted the tag as "retelling" and it should be "retellings" plural.
I have corrected the first post including the name of the tag and the link to the tag shelf.
Honestly, I do not think it will impact too much EXCEPT PERHAPS whether your book fits the EXACT tag for Trim. Though, I am going to guess it is highly likely that the book fits both.
Because this is totally my error, for this month's Trim—and this month ONLY—it will count as fitting the monthly tag if it is tagged "retelling" or "retellings." I will post this in the Trim thread as well.
Sorry about that!

🤣😲🤓
Nicole R wrote: "Jenny wrote: "Hi! Question for the mods!
One of the books I'm considering for this tag would fit Horizons as well. However, I haven't been participating in this challenge so should I just post in t..."
Thanks Nicole, I probably will read Mythos: A Retelling of the Myths of Ancient Greece for the tag as it will cover various prompts for other challenges I'm participating in! 😊
One of the books I'm considering for this tag would fit Horizons as well. However, I haven't been participating in this challenge so should I just post in t..."
Thanks Nicole, I probably will read Mythos: A Retelling of the Myths of Ancient Greece for the tag as it will cover various prompts for other challenges I'm participating in! 😊

I need to buy a lottery ticket of some sort, clearly.

Y'all, I am just not as good as Anita, and in my attempt to help out yesterday I posted the tag as "retelling" and it should be "retellings" plural.
I have corrected ..."
I am not sure what the difference is.......???🤔

Y'all, I am just not as good as Anita, and in my attempt to help out yesterday I posted the tag as "retelling" and it should be "retellings" plural.
..."
Me neither, but luckily my trim still fits!

So, the actual tag is "retellings" plural, but I announced it as "retelling" singular. While the meaning of the tag is the same, it may impact if your Trim book is eligible for those bonus points for fitting the monthly tag.
To avoid any issues for people who already started planning, I simply am allowing your Trim book to be tagged exactly "retelling" OR "retellings" to be eligible for the bonus points for fitting the monthly tag.
In reality, it likely isn't an issue as it seems like many books are tagged with both the singular and plural versions of the monthly tag, but I just wanted to be clear in case anyone came up with a problem.




David Vann's Bright Air Black (Medea retelling) sits and a shelf and longs to be read as well.
So many great recommendations. I second The Sacred Chord and The Song of Achilles. Other Trojan War related tales I loved include Dan Simmon's Ilium (a brilliant merging of The Iliad with space opera) and Hair's Athena's Champion.
In the line of fairy tale retellings, Angela Carter's The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories was awesome for its dark humor and smouldering sexuality.

Pride, Prejudice, and Other Flavors by Sonali Dev
Vinegar Girl by Anne Tyler
Dorothy Must Die by Danielle Page
Wicked by Gregory Maguire
Even in Paradise by Elizabeth Nunez
Longbourn by Jo Baker
As for recommendations:
A retelling of the Cain & Abel story: East of Eden by John Steinbeck
A retelling of Hawthorn's Scarlet Letter: When She Woke by Hilary Jordan

Jane Steele
and
The Story of Edgar Sawtelle
Totally agree these would be perfect.

Retelling of Romeo and Juliet (without the body count) - Julie and Romeo by Jeanne Ray
Retelling of Pride & Prejudice - Jane Austen in Boca by Paula Marantz Cohen


I gave this four stars, so it's quite good as I recall.


While this is YA material so they say it nonetheless is supported with historical facts and photos. Should be a good read.. I hope!

I do hope you like it (whether you read it next month or later!). :-)

Y'all, I am just not as good as Anita, and in my attempt to help out yesterday I posted the tag as "retelling" and it should be "retellings" plural...."
Oh! I even already added the tag to the bookshelf last night and double checked (based on this thread!) whether it should be plural or not. I will go fix that now. :-)

If you click on the tag Retelling it would send you to the webpage of Retellings


Interested in that?"
This looks very good I think Helen of Troy is fascinating, I'll probably be reading this!


I read A Thousand and One Nights fairly recently so I'm really interested in this retelling of it, and the ratings are good. But I get a little scared off when many of the reviews have gushing gifs or graphics (suggesting it appeals primarily to young romance readers.)
Also - the Lunar chronicles - is it for the YA crowd, or does it have mature themes and good writing that might appeal to older adults?
Geez, I sound like an old lady!

Retellings is the perfect tag for me as I love them so mu..."
Hope you feel better soon.


Mercedes Lackey has a whole series of retellings called the Five Hundred Kingdoms, starting with The Fairy Godmother.
Juliet Marillier's Daughter of the Forest is a beautiful retelling of the Seven Swan Princes, and her Wildwood Dancing is a retelling of the Twelve Dancing Princesses.
Then there's Naomi Novik's Uprooted and Spinning Silver, both excellent.
For a different spin on retellings, there's Ian Doescher's Shakespeare Star Wars series starting with William Shakespeare's Star Wars: Verily, A New Hope.
Maybe I will finally get around to reading The Bear and the Nightingale!

I want a smart retelling, not a fluffy romantic fantasy written for teens. Though I wouldn't mind light and fluffy if it's also very adult (..."
Thanks Joanne, these look great! I wasn't sure if I wanted to read another Jane Austen retelling, but if I do, Unmarriageable sounds very appealing. I ordered book one of the Once and Future King to get me started.
I really hope we get an Irish or Russia theme this year because those lists are getting longer!

I enjoyed the first 3 books, but I thought the last book was a disappointment. But others have liked it so you might have to decide for yourself...

I enjoyed the first 3 books, but I though..."
Thanks Annapi. I have so many great choices. I think this is another tag could easily fill several months, and satisfy many moods and interests.
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I probably should get to the next in the Fables series (it's been way too long!), so that's: Fables, Vol. 20: Camelot.
I have other options, as well, including:
- Jack of Kinrowan / Charles de Lint
- Cinderella: From Fabletown With Love / Chris Roberson
- Red Hood's Revenge / Jim C. Hines
- The Sleeping Beauty / Mercedes Lackey