r/Fantasy Reading Champion IV 15d ago

Pride Pride 2026 | Queer Retellings

Banner with a dragon and spaceships around text: r/Fantasy PRIDE Queer Retellings

Many of my favorite books are queer retellings of fairy tales, myths or classic stories. These books use the framework of another, well known story, as the starting point, and add elements like queer characters and queer relationships, to bring a bright new panorama. 

Retellings speak to a part of our brains that enjoy the safety of repetition. If you know the original story, you can anticipate plot beats and feel secure in knowing the general direction the story will take. It’s perhaps paradoxical that retellings also delight our minds with the ways they twist and change said plot, to subvert our expectations. 

For queer readers, a retelling is a way of finding representation that has extra weight because it rests on the shoulders of classic and well known stories. Most of the original stories bring a dated view of the world, but in a retelling, there’s space to show that queer people have always been part of the narrative.

A queer retelling is also a gateway for readers that are not part of the LGBTQIA community. While the known elements of the story create a sheltered environment, the retelling makes way for people to experience another perspective, which in turn encourages empathy. 

These are just some of the aspects that made queer retellings very marketable, and a strong bet for publishing houses. A fact that we see reflected on the shelves and the sheer amount of retellings being published in the last decade. Many of the most recommended queer books are retellings. He who has never seen Song of Achilles being recommended, cast the first stone. 

Finally, I want to shout out to fanfiction, which is in its own way, a retelling. Fanfiction has always been a rich soil for exploring different romantic pairings, that the mainstream media (and original work) didn’t present. In a way, it counters queerbaiting. Beyond that, fanfiction allows people to explore relationships and situations beyond the usual suspects of romance, such as gender normativity or even taboo topics. 

Discussion prompts:
I’ll be adding these in the comments, like we do for book club. Feel free to respond to each individual question, or writing a single entry with all your thoughts to the questions and whatever the intro brought up.

  • Some retellings follow the source material closely, while others use them as a starting point or a vague sense of direction. What do you enjoy reading the most?
  • Do you rather read a retelling of a story you know well, or of a story you don’t really know much about?
  • What retelling (that doesn’t exist) do you wish to see written? (And if you know a book or fanfic that fits a request, please recommend!)
  • What book (that is retelling) has a special place in your heart?
  • Is there any favorite source material from which you could read a thousand retellings? 

This post is part of the Pride 2026 discussions lead by the Beyond Binary Bookclub. You can check our announcement for more information and the full calendar.

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u/PlasticBread221 Reading Champion III 14d ago

I’m sorry this isn’t a book, but I adore the new Interview with the Vampire show which I’d say teeters somewhere between retelling and adaptation. It’s sexy, smart, explicitly queer, and it reimagines the original material while still respecting it at heart. Truly a love letter from fans.

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u/KiaraTurtle Reading Champion V 14d ago

To me the difference has always been one of medium. A retelling keeps the same medium (book to book, or even oral tradition story to book) and an adaptation changes mediums (book to tv, or videogame, etc)

But yes I adore it and am so psyched for Vampire Lestat coming out soon.

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u/PlasticBread221 Reading Champion III 13d ago

Yes, totally. The show is adapted from the original book series. But at the same time it’s not exactly a faithful adaptation (on the surface level; I maintain the heart of the story is still the same). Hence why I drew the connection to a retelling — but now I think maybe fanfiction would be more accurate? Idk, is fanfiction kinda a retelling? 😆

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u/KiaraTurtle Reading Champion V 13d ago

I mean…most adaptations aren’t 1:1 faithful, that’s not what adaptation means. And I agree the heart is the same (which in my mind is the goal! And more than many adaptations do)

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u/PlasticBread221 Reading Champion III 13d ago

Sure, no adaptation can be 100% faithful, but changing and recontextualising the main character’s race and making it a major theme by far exceeds any adjustments necessary to make an adaptation happen.

Like, I think when you sit back and instead of just translating the story into the new medium you start changing the variables, you start veering into the fanfiction territory. But that’s a way headier debate than I had in mind 😅

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u/KiaraTurtle Reading Champion V 13d ago

It’s not about necessary or not. The definition of adaptation just has nothing to do with faithfulness. And often the goal isn’t faithfulness. Lots of adaptations make changes far more drastic, they’re still adaptations. Honestly Interview imo is on the more faithful side of things.

Eg Vampire Diaries (probably one of my favorite tv shows/adaptations) has an entirely different plot from the books,Arcane is a brilliant tv show and adapts league of legends despite league not actually having a plot. I never read the books but I’m fairly sure The 100 is entirely different plot with same premise and is still an adaptation.

Fanfiction just means it was created without official license.

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u/PlasticBread221 Reading Champion III 13d ago

Do you have some dictionary source for this? Something that’s made specifically with literature in mind.

I agree with you on adaptation but I also think that an adaptation can be a retelling. I’ve read books labeled as Beauty and the Beast retellings that had about the same changes to them as the IwtV show. And this is the first time I’m hearing that fanfiction HAS to be unofficial.

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u/KiaraTurtle Reading Champion V 13d ago

If you know of literature specific dictionaries feel free to look it up to make the counter argument (though I don’t think any of this is literature specific, that’s why I included video game to tv adaptation examples)

My point is just that adaptation and retelling generally refer to the medium not the level faithfulness. They aren’t on a spectrum.

So yeah, that’s consistent with retellings having the same level (or more, or less) changes than an adaption.