The Scary Book of Fairy Tales: The Haunting Endings to 50 of Your Favorite Stories by Tim Rayborn with illustrations by Neil Evans(2025)
144-page Kindle Ebook story pages 10-140
Genre: Fantasy - Fairytales & Folktales; Children's Fiction
Featuring: Old Stories, Abridged and to the Point, Drops of Blood, Cannibalism, Murder, Evil, Sexual Innuendos, Versions, Incest, Misogyny, Ghosts, Angels, Devils, Author’s Links
Rating as a movie: PG-15 for gruesome violence
My rating: ⭐️⭐️⭐️½🧚🏻♀️📚
My thoughts: Introductíon - This was very good although I would have appreciated some explanation of the difference between a fairytale and a folktale.
❄️🍎🇩🇪 Snow Whíte (Brothers Grímm) - This is pretty much the way I heard it before except her being warned not to open the door to strangers. However, I do not recall the shoes at the end of the story but maybe it was there because I do remember thinking that some of the stuff they took from Hans Christian Andersen, and the end of this story sounds very reminiscent of The Red Shoes.
🔥🇩🇪 Aschenputtel, the Líttle Cínder Gírl (Brothers Grímm) - I do not recall the shoes at the end of the story but maybe it was there because I do remember thinking that some of the stuff they took from Hans Christian Andersen, and the end of this story sounds very reminiscent of The Red Shoes.
🥖🍭🇩🇪 Hansel and Gretel (Brothers Grímm) - Same
💇🏼♀️🇩🇪Rapunzel (Brothers Grímm) - They left out the part about her tummy getting fat, but mentioned lovemaking at the end.
🪙🇩🇪 Rumpelstíltskín (Brothers Grímm) - This was the same, I guess the tearing himself into is supposed to be the scary part. This illustration is the ugliest version I've ever seen of this character.
📯🇩🇪 The Chíldren of Hameln (Brothers Grímm) - Same, actually these versions seem shorter than the "original" I heard before.
🌲🇩🇪 The Juníper Tree (Brothers Grímm) - Same but this is definitely an abridged version.
🐓🐔🇩🇪 Herr Korbes (Brothers Grímm) - First time and meh.
🪵🇩🇪 Frau Trude (Brothers Grímm) - Meh. Not much of a plot
🩺🤚🫀👀🇩🇪 The Three Army Surgeons (Brothers Grímm) - Crazy and lacks purpose.
🌭🇩🇪 The Strange Feast (Brothers Grímm) - I knew the minute I read that a blood sausage invited a liver sausage to dinner, this was not going to be a good story.
💍🇩🇪 The Robber Brídegroom (Brothers Grímm) - Same just short.
🍗🐸🇩🇪 The Ungrateful Son (Brothers Grímm) -
🦆👸🏼🇩🇪 The Goose Gírl (Brothers Grímm) - Same but shorter.
🥚🧺🇩🇪 Fítcher’s Bírd (Brothers Grímm) - Odd, but okay! 👍🏾
🔪🥩🇩🇪 How Some Chíldren Played at Slaughteríng (Brothers Grímm) - Gross and sad.
🏠🇩🇪 Mother Holle (Brothers Grímm) - Same
👿🇩🇪 The Gírl Wíthout Hands (Brothers Grímm) - Same but super short.
🧜🏼♀️🇩🇰 The Líttle Mermaíd (Hans Chrístían Andersen) - Like a ¼ of the story, this was practically a quick summary. They left out the part where the sea witch made a potion out of her own blood, and erased the part about doing good deeds to get a soul and the mercy of children’s behavior.
👠🇩🇰 The Red Shoes (Hans Chrístían Andersen) - This is very different than the version I originally heard where she is dancing in the forest and dropping dead I'm not sure which one is more grim this one had a semi-happy ending so I'm gonna go with the version I heard first.
👍🇩🇪 The Story of the Thumb Sucker (Heínrích Hoffmann, Der Struwwelpeter, 1845) - 😆 my grandpa threatened to cut off my thumb when I was 4, he probably heard this story as a kid.
🔥🇩🇪 The Very Sad Tale wíth the Matches (Heínrích Hoffmann, Der Struwwelpeter, 1845) - The original: Don’t play with matches.
☠️🇮🇹 The Flea (Gíambattísta Basíle, the Pentamerone, 1634) - I didn't like this one.
🤪👐🇮🇹 Penta of the Chopped-Off Hands (Gíambattísta Basíle, the Pentamerone, 1634) - This is pretty much a different version of the girl with no hands.
🥮🧈🐺🇫🇷 Líttle Red Rídíng Hood (Charles Perrault, Hístoíres ou contes du temps passé, 1697) - I prefer the brother Grimm's version.
🧔🏻🇫🇷 Blue Beard (Charles Perrault, Hístoíres ou contes du temps passé, 1697) - Very similar to Fítcher’s Bírd.
🐴🇫🇷 Donkeyskín (Charles Perrault, Hístoíres ou contes du temps passé, 1697) - Just another story about incestuous desires and deception.
✝️🇫🇷 The Crucífíx Príest (Medíeval French fablíaux) - I heard a different version of this story by Hans Christian Anderson as well as by The Grimms where the guy was in the cupboard and talking. This was actually not a bad story, and it was very dark.
👩🏻🦳🐻🐻❄🧸🏴 The Story of the Three Bears (Robert Southey, 1839) - LMBO at Silverlocks.
💀🧙🏻♀️🪆🇷🇺 Vasílísa and Baba Yaga (Russían faíry tale) - This story is often compared to Cinderella but I think it's more original than that.
🌹🥀🇳🇴 Tatterhood (Norwegían faíry tale) - I didn't care for this one, it was all over the place and predictable.
🧣🏴 The Satín Frock (Yorkshíre folktale) - Smh. This is getting ridiculous.
🤰🐑🇮🇸 My Mother ín the Fold (Icelandíc folktale)
💀👻🇵🇱 The Plague Swarm (Polísh folktale) - I didn't like this one.
🪖🧟♀️🧟♂️🇷🇺 The Two Corpses (Russían folktale) - This one reminded me of the troll scene in The Hobbit.
❄️👶🇫🇷🇩🇪 The Snow Chíld (French/German folktale) - I wonder if this is where Olaf came from.
🪶🦴🇮🇹 The Gríffín’s Feather and the Speakíng Bone (Italían folktale) - I heard a longer version of this tale in the Grimms' Book it was an epic adventure filled with betrayal and a princess.
🐖🇷🇴 The Enchanted Píg (Romanían folktale) - Meh. It shouldn't have been rushed because the second part made little sense. Although the ending explained the curse.
💍🕌🇮🇳🇮🇷 The Tale of Scheherazade (1001 Níghts) - Same and too short.
🛍🕌🍛🇮🇳🇮🇷 The Merchant and the Two Sharpers (1001 Níghts) - This is okay, very predictable.
🇪🇬 The Place Where There Were No Graves (Egyptían folktale) - This was good but dark. They actual practiced this in the ancient islands of the Pacific.
🐒🐝🇮🇳 The Foolísh Fríend (The Panchatantra, Indían folktale) - Well, that was different. It could have been longer.
💀🕷🇳🇬 The Daughter Who Marríed a Skull (Nígerían folktale) - 😆 Poor girl.
☠️👻🇯🇵Botan Dōrō, the Peony Lantern (Japanese folktale) - This was good.
🐉🪨🇲🇳 Haílíbu, the Hunter (Mongolían folktale) - Not bad but very reminiscent of other tales.
🦜🪨🇵🇭 The Boy Devoured by a Stone (Tínguían folktale, Phílíppínes) - Too short and no moral lesson.
🇨🇦🇺🇸 🪲🐞🦋 The Old Woman Who Was Kínd to Insects (Inuít folktale) - Weird but it did remind me of Island of the Blue Dolphins.
🌴🇵🇾 The Tímbo Tree (Guaraní folktale, Paraguay) - Just okay.
🐍🇧🇷 Boítatá (South Amerícan/Brazílían legend) - Meh.
🌊👻🇲🇽 La Llorona (Mexícan and Central Amerícan ghost story) - I knew this was going to be Woman Hollering Creek.
I read Grimm's Fairytales by Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm (1812) and those stories went on and on and on about nothing in between the action scenes so these stories are definitely abridged versions that just happen to tell you the horror they might have cut out of the 1900s version but nothing is shocking here. It didn’t really get interesting until I moved on from the European fairytales. Although some of the stories were interesting the way the stories are told and this book was very disappointing they are pretty much summaries of stories. They skip all of the details and just give you the bones. I did not learn anything new from the stories I was already familiar with. I think I have already heard the so-called original versions and it certainly was not scary.
Recommend to others: Probably not unless you're in it for the historical value. These stories aren't told well.
Memorable Quotes: Most of us listened to fairy tales as young children, and many might have had their introduction to them via Disney or other child-friendly versions. Tales like Snow White, Cinderella, and Rapunzel are timeless classics that transport young listeners into fantasy worlds of young love, adventure, evildoers, strange creatures, and more. But there is a much darker side to many of these beloved tales than most people realize. And many of these darker tales were found in the original collections themselves. The famous tales collected by Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm are the most obvious examples. Indeed, a few of these stories, which they collected from various tellers in early nineteenth-century Germany, were so dark and depressing that they removed or modified them in later editions. Stories of murder, cannibalism, incest, torture, kidnapping, and more abound in these allegedly children’s tales. But why is that? Why are some of them so horrible? Well, these kinds of fairy tales were often intended as teaching tools for young children. Warning them about a cannibalistic witch who lived in a nearby forest was a good way to show them the peril of wandering off on their own. The world had plenty of its own very real dangers, then and now, and impressing on a child from a young age not to talk to strangers, or get lost somewhere, was valuable for keeping them safe. Cloaking these dangers in fantastical stories only made them more meaningful. It’s fair to say that the times in which these stories arose were more violent, people’s lifespans tended to be shorter, and their lives were harder overall. Children were not coddled and often had to grow up much more quickly, especially those who were poor. So, a tale that offered some important lesson or gave a reason for why certain things were the way they were made good sense. And often, these stories used very violent and bloody examples!