Search Images Maps Play YouTube News Gmail Drive More »
My library | Help | Advanced Book Search | Web History | Sign in

Books

Red as blood:

or tales from the Sisters Grimmer
Front Cover
58 Reviews
Daw Books, 1983 - Fiction - 208 pages
Unusual variations on fairy tales add modern horror to the stories of the Pied Piper, Snow White, Sleeping Beauty, and others

From inside the book

What people are saying - Write a review

User ratings

5 stars
29
4 stars
14
3 stars
8
2 stars
4
1 star
3

Her prose is sumptuous and evocative --a treat to read. - Goodreads
Don't expect happy endings. - Goodreads
Each tale also has, at best, a bittersweet ending. - Goodreads
At least until the ending. - Goodreads

Review: Red as Blood, or Tales from the Sisters Grimmer

User Review  - Nathan Miller - Goodreads

Many of us grow...well, not necessarily tired of fairy tales, so much as weary of the sickeningly sweet happily ever after versions we've all come to know and sometimes loathe. After all, the ... Read full review

Review: Red as Blood, or Tales from the Sisters Grimmer

User Review  - Misha Husnain Ali - Goodreads

Despite a couple of entries I did not like as much, the higher points definitely make up for it. Definitely one to re-read in the future for me. Read full review

All 58 reviews »

Related books

Contents

PAID PIPER
7
RED AS BLOOD
26
WHEN THE CLOCK STRIKES
49
Copyright

4 other sections not shown

Common terms and phrases

About the author (1983)

Tanith Lee, September 19, 1947 - Tanith Lee was born on September 19, 1947 in London, England, the daughter of ballroom dancers. She attended various primary schools and had a variety of jobs, from file clerk and assistant librarian to shop assistant and waitress. Lee attended an art college for one year, but felt she would be better writing her ideas than painting them. Her first professional sale was "Eustace," a 90 page vignette which appeared in The Ninth Pan Book of Horror Stories in 1968. While Lee was working as an assistant librarian, she wrote a children's story that was accepted for publication. Others of her stories were also bought but never published. In 1971, Macmillan published "The Dragon Hoard," another children's book, which was followed by "Animal Castle" and "Princess Hynchatti and Other Stories" in 1972. Lee had been looking for a British publisher for her book "The Birthgrave," but has been denied at every House she went. She then wrote to American publisher DAW, known for it's fantasy and horror selections, who immediately accepted her manuscript and published the book in 1975. Thus began a partnership between the two that lasted till 1989 and resulted in 28 books. After the publication of her third book by DAW, Lee quit her job and became a full time freelance writer. Lee has been nominated for the World Fantasy Award, the August Derleth Award and the Nebula. She has had more than 40 novels published, along with over 200 short stories.

Bibliographic information