Well, perhaps I am being a bit too critical regarding the September 2025 picture book Hansel and Gretel (with a newly retold text by Stephen King and illustrations by the late Maurice Sendak). But no, I personally (indeed my inner child as well as adult I) have not really enjoyed how King reframes and features Jakob and Wilhelm Grimm's folktale of Hänsel und Gretel all that much. Sure, Stephen King generally keeps to the general contents of Hänsel und Gretel (which I do appreciate as I was kind of worried that his text would be much too creepy and also much too different from the original story), but those reviewers who claim that what King textually presents in Hansel and Gretel is delightfully and splendidly spine-chilling and is also supposedly considerably more uncanny and horrifying than what is recounted by the Brothers Grimm, sorry, but I do hugely beg to majorly differ here.
For one, if Stephen King really wants to make his Hansel and Gretel truly uncomfortable and dreadful, he should be using the 1812 and not the 1857 version of Hänsel und Gretel and have an evil biological mother and not an evil stepmother. Furthermore, why does King in Hansel and Gretel allow the stepmother to in fact survive and just be sent away by the children's father, when Jakob and Wilhelm Grimm actually kill her off (and I was kind of expecting and hoping that the stepmother's death would be depicted in gruesome detail in Hansel and Gretel, how in my humble opinion, the ending of Hansel and Gretel and even Rhea the witch being baked to death by Gretel is pretty standardly folkloric and is certainly not in any way majorly creepy and as such equally not akin to Stephen King's general horror writing). And for two, albeit both the witch and the evil stepmother are textually expanded on a wee bit in Hansel and Gretel, the stepmother being greedy and hiding food while at the same time claiming that there is not enough around and that Hansel and Gretel must thus be abandoned in the forest and that Rhea is described by King as motherly and helpful on the outside but a depraved, ugly and terrifying witch and monstrosity on the inside (when she basically takes off her disguise), sorry, but there is at least for me not enough narrative meat so to speak present and that what Stephen King has added to make Hansel and Gretel creepier for me does not really succeed all that well (and that I for one also hugely prefer what Jakob and Wilhelm Grimm originally penned in German, that their Hänsel und Gretel is both more readable and also more engaging than Hansel and Gretel, that King's retelling is alright but rather blah and annoyingly tedious for me).
And finally, while I really do enjoy Maurice Sendak's artwork as it appears in Hansel and Gretel in and of itself, considering that Sendak's illustrations were originally done for Engelbert Humperdinck's Hansel and Gretel opera (where Adelheid Wette's libretto is based on Hänsel und Gretel but also has many differences, such as for example an evil witch who flies around on her broomstick, kidnaps children and turns them into gingerbread people, that Hansel and Gretel's mother does not abandon her children in the forest and is searching for them with her husband and that when the witch is baked, the enchanted gingerbread children are also released), many of Sendak's illustrations do tend to work (at least for me) much better and much more successfully with Humperdinck's opera and feel kind of visually disconnected to what Stephen King is narrationally, is textually presenting in Hansel and Gretel (and indeed, that this disconnection, combined with me not enjoying King's text for Hansel and Gretel all that much if at all, yes, this also means that my rating for Hansel and Gretel can and will only be two stars, and that I am indeed quite majorly disappointed).