Well, I'd love to tell you, but we couldn't decide.
The March Madness Writing Contest!
Just kidding :) We decided... in the end... but it was nearly the end of us, and I'm not sure who will be living happily ever after!
We agonized.
Seriously.
We've done nothing but eat, sleep and breathe fairy tales for the last 3 days solid. (Well, not counting a school visit on Tuesday which took me out of the judging room for a large portion of the day.) And we stayed up WAY past our bedtimes last night (which is likely to result in a challenging school visit today!), evaluating and re-evaluating, weighing kid-friendliness, story quality, creativity, and originality, good beginnings, good endings, and clever twists, stories for youngest readers, middle grade readers, and teen readers.
We had entries that moved down out of the finalists short list and back up. We had entries that were incredibly creative and well-written but weren't quite stories. We had entries that were great ideas but their plots didn't quite hang together. We had entries we loved until the last two sentences. We had a couple that even the judge who usually goes for such things thought were a little too dark. We had entries we loved that we thought were a little too adult or that had elements of humor we thought were too adult for the rest of the story. And we had a LOT of entries that were great but we felt just lacked that certain something to put them quite over the top onto the list... and that of course is subjective to some degree, so another group of judges might have chosen differently.
Any of you who had a chance to read through the entries will know how fantastic they were. Across the board you guys should all be so proud of yourselves! Not only did you show up, you delivered! And like I said, the choice was incredibly hard.
So, without further ado...
... let me give you a few statistics that I'm sure you'll find thrilling :)
In case you were wondering (admit it, you were), the fairy tale entries broke down as follows:
Also, the human eye blinks an everage of 4,200,000 times a year... since we're talking statistics :)
And now, without further ado...
Wait. One more thing.
There were so many great entries we DID after much tearing of hair and rending of garments come up with a finalist list, but in order to do so we had to be incredibly picky about minute details. Many of the stories we cut were fantastic... but for one tiny detail which dropped them out of contention. So on Monday, when we announce the winners, we will also announce a list of 12 Honorable Mentions (a nice even dozen :)) who almost made the list and truly deserve recognition, and they will probably qualify for a little prize of some kind which I will think up over the weekend :)
VOTING: Please read through these 10 amazing stories, choose the one you think most deserves to win, and vote for it in the poll below. Stories are listed by number and title only - author's name deliberately omitted to help with objectivity in voting. If you'd like to share this post on FB, twitter etc. so that the deserving finalists get more reads and votes, you are encouraged to do so, but I ask that you please not attempt to influence the vote by requesting people to vote for specific numbers or titles. That is not in the spirit of the competition, and if I find out you've done it you will be disqualified.
And now, really without further ado...
...here are the 10 Finalists:
#1 The Three Wiggly Worms Bluff
#2 Sweetie Witch
#3 The Princess And The Stinky Cheese
#4 The Jackrabbit Who Cried Gila Monster
#5 Little Red Riding Hood And The Tiny Rude Bunny
#8 Sleeping Beauty: Burn The Wheel, Spare The Barrel
#9 The "Princess" And The Pete
#10 Goldilockup
Please vote for the one you think deserves to win by Sunday March 30 at 5 PM EDT. Winners will be announced on Monday March 31!!
Thank you all so much for reading and voting! I can't wait to see who the winners are!!!
Have a terrific Thursday and a wonderful weekend!
See you Monday with the winners :)
We agonized.
Seriously.
We've done nothing but eat, sleep and breathe fairy tales for the last 3 days solid. (Well, not counting a school visit on Tuesday which took me out of the judging room for a large portion of the day.) And we stayed up WAY past our bedtimes last night (which is likely to result in a challenging school visit today!), evaluating and re-evaluating, weighing kid-friendliness, story quality, creativity, and originality, good beginnings, good endings, and clever twists, stories for youngest readers, middle grade readers, and teen readers.
We had entries that moved down out of the finalists short list and back up. We had entries that were incredibly creative and well-written but weren't quite stories. We had entries that were great ideas but their plots didn't quite hang together. We had entries we loved until the last two sentences. We had a couple that even the judge who usually goes for such things thought were a little too dark. We had entries we loved that we thought were a little too adult or that had elements of humor we thought were too adult for the rest of the story. And we had a LOT of entries that were great but we felt just lacked that certain something to put them quite over the top onto the list... and that of course is subjective to some degree, so another group of judges might have chosen differently.
Any of you who had a chance to read through the entries will know how fantastic they were. Across the board you guys should all be so proud of yourselves! Not only did you show up, you delivered! And like I said, the choice was incredibly hard.
So, without further ado...
... let me give you a few statistics that I'm sure you'll find thrilling :)
In case you were wondering (admit it, you were), the fairy tale entries broke down as follows:
Goldilocks:
10
Red Riding
Hood: 8
Cinderella:
5
Jack &
Bean Stalk: 5
Mash-Up: 5
Princess
& Pea: 4
Billy
Goats Gruff: 4
Hansel
& Gretel: 4
Nursery Rhyme-related: 4
3 Little
Pigs: 3
Little Red
Hen: 3
Boy Who
Cried Wolf: 3
Sleeping
Beauty: 2 (one of which was submitted by my husband and was therefore just for fun)
Gingerbread
Man: 2 (one of which was mine, so technically not an entry :))
12 Dancing
Princesses: 2
Emperor’s
New Clothes: 1
Snow White: 1
Rapunzel: 1
Shoemaker
& Elves: 1
Frog
Prince: 1
Tortoise & Hare: 1
Tortoise & Hare: 1
Also, the human eye blinks an everage of 4,200,000 times a year... since we're talking statistics :)
And now, without further ado...
Wait. One more thing.
There were so many great entries we DID after much tearing of hair and rending of garments come up with a finalist list, but in order to do so we had to be incredibly picky about minute details. Many of the stories we cut were fantastic... but for one tiny detail which dropped them out of contention. So on Monday, when we announce the winners, we will also announce a list of 12 Honorable Mentions (a nice even dozen :)) who almost made the list and truly deserve recognition, and they will probably qualify for a little prize of some kind which I will think up over the weekend :)
VOTING: Please read through these 10 amazing stories, choose the one you think most deserves to win, and vote for it in the poll below. Stories are listed by number and title only - author's name deliberately omitted to help with objectivity in voting. If you'd like to share this post on FB, twitter etc. so that the deserving finalists get more reads and votes, you are encouraged to do so, but I ask that you please not attempt to influence the vote by requesting people to vote for specific numbers or titles. That is not in the spirit of the competition, and if I find out you've done it you will be disqualified.
And now, really without further ado...
...here are the 10 Finalists:
#1 The Three Wiggly Worms Bluff
“Melting
snow is swamping the soil! Time to head to higher ground,” said Papa Worm.
Papa,
Mama and Baby Worm squirmed to the surface and wiggled up the grassy slope to
face—
the
dreaded sidewalk.
“Ow!
It’s rough,” said Baby.
“Go
as fast as you can.” Mama gave him a pat. “And keep a lookout for birds.”
Baby
wiggled as fast as he could.
But
he was only halfway across when a robin swooped down.
“I’m
going to gobble you up and take you to my babies!” the robin squawked.
“I’m
a baby myself. Barely a bite, and not worth your flight. Mama is coming, she’s
more than a morsel. Why don’t you wait for her?” said Baby.
The
robin thanked Baby and sent him on his way.
When
the coast looked clear, Mama wiggled as fast as she could.
But
she was barely halfway across when the robin hopped out from a bush.
“I’m
going to gobble you up and take you to my babies!” the robin squawked.
“I’d
make an adequate dinner, but if you want to treat your babies to a feast you
might want to wait for Papa worm. He’s coming next,” said Mama.
The
robin thanked Mama and sent her on her way.
Papa
did calisthenics, warming up his wiggle. Between the birds and the pavement
heating up, He needed to be fast!
Papa
wasn’t halfway across when the robin landed in his path.
“I’m
going to gobble you up and take you to my babies!” the robin squawked. “You are
plump perfection!”
“Is
it true that the early bird gets the worm?” asked Papa.
“That’s
true.” The robin opened wide.
“Stop!
How do I know you’re the early bird? Maybe someone else is supposed to
eat me,” said Papa.
A
second bird saw its chance. “I was here first.”
“No,
you weren’t!” the robin screeched.
“I’m
the early bird!” they both insisted.
The
two birds went beak to beak, pecking and pulling feathers.
While
the birds quarreled, Papa wiggled,
across
the concrete and—Ploop!—down a hole in the grass.
“No
worm for the early bird today.” Papa hugged his family.
They
wiggled down to enjoy their damp, but not flooded, springtime home. .
until summer heat baked
the soil and they had to return across the sidewalk again.
#2 Sweetie Witch
A sweet old witch named Hilda
Lived deep in Toffee Wood,
Weaving magic, casting spells...
Some bad, but mostly good.
One day while dipping in a stream
To catch a moonlight pearl,
She heard a sob, and in a bush
There crouched a tearful girl.
"I beg you Miss, don't eat me!"
Pleaded little Gretel,
"My bones are dry, my flesh is thin,
My blood tastes yuck, like metal."
Hilda laughed and shook her head,
Though Gretel was suspicious.
"Why would I eat you dear
When my house tastes so delicious?"
The witch led Gretel through the trees
Into a fairy glade,
And Gretel's eyes grew round as hoops
At wonders there displayed.
A cottage built from gingerbread
And cake, instead of oak.
Up from the chocolate chimney pot
Rose cotton-candy smoke.
Brightly colored lollipops
In pots beside the door.
Honeycomb for roof tiles,
And sherbet on the floor.
A table made from liquorice,
With soft marshmallow chairs.
A rug of woven apple-whips,
And jelly-beans for stairs.
"The best part's round the back, my dear,"
Hilda trilled with glee,
"My sweetie tree makes anything - look -
I'm growing a muffin settee!"
When Gretel saw she gave a gasp
For on it her brother sat,
His mouth crammed full of muffin crumbs,
Stroking the witch's cat.
"Hello there, my name's Hansel,"
The foolish glutton said,
"Could you get me some milk to wash this down?"
Suddenly... the witch... saw RED!
"Oh, greedy boy!" yelled Hilda,
"You really are a hog!"
With that she waved her candy wand
And turned him to a frog.
Poor Gretel started weeping,
Which softened Hilda's heart,
And she turned her to a frog too
So they'd never be apart.
Now Hansel and Gretel live happily
In Hilda's little stream,
Diving down for moonlight pearls
And eating fly ice-cream.
#3 The Princess And The Stinky Cheese
"If you don't find a princess to marry soon," the
Queen said, "I'll be forced to give the crown to the dog."
"Mother, your ridiculous "true princess" tests
are the problem," Prince Plumbottom whined. "Let's
see. Merida didn't feel the grain of rice in her pillow."
"Snored like a bear."
"Fiona couldn't taste donkey snot in her soup."
"Gobbled it down like a dragon."
"Even if a princess passed your
test," Prince Plumbottom said, "Princesses are so boring. I want to
marry a daring lass!"
"Very well, son. We will look for a true princess who is
also daring. I know just the right test."
"Here comes a girl now, and she has a branch in her
hair!" he clapped his hands. "This young woman has had an
adventure."
The prince skipped over to the soaking wet maiden.
"Hello, I'm Prince Plumbottom."
"Hello, I'm Princess Peabody," she said. "I was
tracking a rattlesnake, but I fell into the river and now I'm quite lost."
"A rattlesnake? How daring!" the prince
squealed. "Won't you join us for lunch?"
Princess Peabody wiped her muddy face with a napkin. She was
about to blow her nose, but stopped when she heard the Queen whisper
"Stinky Cheese Test" to the prince. She had heard of queens like
this.
"Cheese, dear?" the Queen asked.
"Oh, it's a lovely green," Princess Peabody said.
"But it's not nearly stinky enough."
The prince beamed.
The Queen thumped on the table. "Cook! Bring the stinkier
cheese!"
The cook held a handkerchief over her nose and presented the
stinkier cheese.
"Yummy. It smells like an ogre's shoe," the princess
said. "But my Kingdom has much stinkier cheese."
The Queen's face turned red. "Guards! Find the stinkiest
cheese in the land!"
The knights returned with a metal trunk which smelled like a
dragon's armpit.
"Open it!" the Queen commanded.
The knights closed their armor masks and reached with a sword to
open the chest. The stench was so horrific, so terrible, so...
stinky that everyone fainted.
Everyone except Princess Peabody.
She fed the stinky cheese to the royal dog who didn't mind the
smell at all. Then she blew her nose, finally clearing it of river mud.
The Queen came to and saw the empty cheese plate. "A true
princess!"
Prince Plumbottom declared, "A daring princess!"
Burp! The dog agreed.
And they all lived stinkily ever after.
#4 The Jackrabbit Who Cried Gila Monster
Torito’s brothers were sound asleep,
but Torito . . . was as perky as a cactus.
Naps are no fun, he thought. He twiddled his ears until he got a
wonderful idea.
“Help!” he cried. “There’s a Gila monster under our bed!”
Torito’s brothers jumped so high, they bumped the ceiling. Mama
burst into the room, broom in hand. Torito giggled.
“Torito,” Mama said, grabbing the stuffed Gila monster he’d
hidden, “YOU are supposed
to be asleep.” She handed him the toy and left.
Torito and his brothers snuggled into their bed. Soon his
brothers were sound asleep, but
Torito . . . was as restless as a tumbleweed.
Naps are boring, he thought. I know . . .
“Help!” he cried. “There’s a Gila monster under our bed!”
Torito’s brothers cowered in the corner. Mama burst into the
room. Torito laughed so hard, his sides ached.
“Torito J. Jackrabbit,” Mama said, grabbing the stuffed Gila
monster, “YOU—”
“I tricked you!” Torito teased.
Mama crossed her arms. “It isn't nice to trick. Now go to
sleep.” This time she kept the toy.
Torito and his brothers snuggled into their bed. Torito was as
tired as a tortoise.
He closed his eyes.
Scritch-scratch!
Torito tore off his covers and peeked under the bed.
He gasped.
Two beady eyes stared back at him. Five sharp claws flexed on each hand. A
long, purple tongue flickered out.
“Giiiiii-laaaaa monnnn-sterrrrr!” Torito yelled as he leaped
into the closet.
His brothers didn’t move. They covered their ears and rolled
over.
“Mama!” Torito screamed.
But Mama called back, “Go to sleep, Torito.”
The Gila monster stretched its jaws. Torito’s heart raced.
Suddently, he got a wonderful idea—he knew Mama wouldn’t like it—but he
didn’t know what else to do.
“Watch
out!” Torito cried, “There’s a coyote in this
closet!”
The Gila monster scoffed. “I’m not falling for that.”
Torito pulled the string on his stuffed coyote. Yarooooooooo!
the toy howled.
The Gila monster hissed and scurried out the window. When he was
far enough away, Torito called out, “I tricked you!”
“Torito . . .” Mama’s voice drifted from the kitchen.
“I know—it isn’t nice to trick.” (Unless it saves your life,) he
thought.
Clutching his stuffed coyote, Torito snuggled between his
brothers.
Soon, he
felt as calm as the desert sand and drifted off into a peaceful jackrabbit
slumber.
#5 Little Red Riding Hood And The Tiny Rude Bunny
Once upon a springtime, Little Red Riding Hood encountered a
bunny nibbling grass near the forest path. He said, “Good morning, little girl.
Where are you going?”
Now, Red knew she should not talk to strangers. She had talked
to a wolf once, and had almost been eaten! But this was just a tiny bunny, so
she said, “To grandmother’s house.”
“What’s in your basket?”
“Fancy eggs,” Red answered, showing him. The eggs sparkled like
beautiful pink, blue, green, and gold gems. “We’re going to share them with the
village children.”
“I want them!” The bunny grabbed at the basket. He was not a
very polite bunny.
“No!” said Red. And off she went.
The bunny was angry. He wanted those eggs! He would trick her
into giving them to him.
Over the river and through the woods, the bunny raced to
Grandma’s house. And, because bunnies are very fast when they want to be, he
got there well before Red.
Bunny knocked on the door. No one was home. So he ran inside,
put on Grandma’s clothes, and jumped into her bed, just as Red got to the
cottage.
She was suspicious immediately.
“Grandma, you look so small today.”
“People shrink as they age,” the bunny said. “It’s not nice to
point it out.”
“What big ears you have.”
“Ears never stop growing. A polite girl wouldn’t mention it.”
“What big whiskers you have.”
“How rude!”
“What big teeth you have.”
That was the last straw for bunny. “The better to eat your eggs,”
he said and jumped from the bed.
Red wasn’t scared. After all, this wasn’t a big, bad wolf, this
was a tiny rude bunny. She picked him up by the scruff of his neck. “No,” she
said. “In fact, as punishment, you can deliver these eggs to the children for
us.”
“Good idea,” said Grandma, coming in and pulling out a wand.
(Ever since the incident with the wolf, Grandma had been studying witchcraft as
self-defence.) She cast a spell to make the bunny deliver the eggs.
But the bunny was tricky. Instead of giving the eggs to the
children, he hid them around their houses. The next day he went back and stole
the ones they’d missed. But the kids had so much fun that Grandma let the bunny
keep his eggs, so long as he promised to hide more again next year.
#6 Goldibawks And The Three Pairs
Once upon a time there lived a mama duck, a daddy duck and
junior duck.
One day after mama fixed seaweed stew they went out for a waddle
while it cooled.
Meanwhile nearby, Goldibawks, a young chicken as yellow as the
sun, who had just wandered out from the countryside, spotted an ad.
WANTED:
BASKETBALL
PLAYER
FOR NCAA
MARCH MADNESS BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT
TODAY AT
CHICKERBOCKER ARENA
c/o
National Chicken Athletic Association
Wattles wiggling, Golidbawks was eggstatic. Back on
the farm, the roosters refused to let her play. This was her chance to show those
roosters in the coop that this chick can play hoop!
In a shirt, skirt and heels, Goldibawks needed gym clothes but
she was too far from home. Just then she saw the ducks’ house. She knocked. No
one answered. She tried the door and it opened so she let herself in.
Goldibawks looked around for gym shorts.
She found papa’s pair but they were too boring.
She found mama’s pair but they were too bright.
She found junior’s pair and they were just right, so she put
them on.
Next Goldibawks looked for socks.
She found papa’s pair but they were too dingy.
She found mama’s pair but they were too white.
She found junior’s pair and they were just right, so she put
them on.
Finally, Goldibawks looked for some cool kicks.
She found papa’s pair but they were too heavy.
She found mama’s pair but they were too light.
She found junior’s pair and they were just right, so she put
them on.
Then the ducks burst in. Goldibawks hid.
“Somebody tried on my shorts, socks and sneakers,” quacked
papa duck.
“Somebody tried on my shorts, socks and sneakers,”
quacked mama duck.
“Somebody tried on my shorts, socks and sneakers, and
still has them on,” quacked junior duck.
With that, they spied Golidbawks, dressed in junior’s gear.
“I can eggsplain,” she clucked and told the ducks the whole
story.
Eggcited for Goldibawks, the ducks escorted her to the arena.
Goldibawks joined the team alongside Charles Bawkley, Larry
Byrd, Mag-chick Johnson and Michael Jord-hen.
She had a stellar game, with a dozen dunks , half a dozen
assists and went twelve for twelve from the fowl line.
Her signature Goldibawks blocks and the team’s peck and roll
offense led them to the NCAA championship game, which they won when Goldi
tipped in the winning shot.
#7 Mongoose's Holi Party
After waiting a really, really, really long time a
king and queen had a baby.
“To celebrate we’ll invite everyone in the kingdom,
especially the fairies!”
But not the Dark Fairy. It could be that they
forgot, or maybe she was a downer and no one wanted her there.
If you are the only person not invited to a party,
it’s not difficult to notice. The Dark Fairy could hear music at the
castle and see bonfires, and crowds. Can you blame her for being mad?
“Curses red, yellow and green, she will prick her
finger on the spindle of a spinning wheel and DIE at age 15!”
“I change it to a nap that ends in a kiss,” said
another fairy.
“Burn every spinning wheel in the kingdom!” cried
the king and queen.
The spinning wheels were burned.
“But how will we make clothes?” asked the king’s
subjects.
You see, spinning wheels are used to create yarn
and thread. Yarn and thread are woven into fabric, and fabric is made
into clothes. No spinning wheels, no clothes.
“What will we wear?” asked the people. “We
can’t afford to buy clothes from other kingdoms!”
Soon everyone was wearing the strangest things.
“Does my wine barrel make me look fat?” asked a
maid.
“I wouldn’t recommend suits of armor without
underwear,” said a chaffed knight.
Storekeepers wore pots and pans. Subjects
grew out their hair.
“We best wear pots and pans too, so everyone will
stop being mad at us,” said the king and queen.
When the princess was 14 years and 364 days old the
king’s subjects had had enough.
“Our barrels give us splinters!”
“Pans are too heavy!”
“Let’s smuggle in a spinning wheel,” someone said,
no one remembers who.
“Where do we hide it?”
“The one place the king and queen won’t look… the
castle’s attic.”
The smugglers had forgotten about the princess.
The king and queen had too. On the princess’
birthday they went on a date.
Exploring, the princess discovered a strange
contraption in the attic. “What an interesting machine, I think I’ll
touch this sharp point.”
The princess pricked her finger on the spindle and
fell into a deep sleep.
“We are in so much trouble,” said the smugglers.
“I’m not going to kiss her, I’m married.” one said.
“She’s already asleep so we can have spinning
wheels now.” agreed the others.
And they
did.
#9 The "Princess" And The Pete
Late in the evening, in cold April showers
A maiden on horseback approached Prince Pete’s towers
“I hate to be forward,” she said, “but I’m beat!”
“Would you have a place I could hide from this sleet?”
A maiden on horseback approached Prince Pete’s towers
“I hate to be forward,” she said, “but I’m beat!”
“Would you have a place I could hide from this sleet?”
Her warm, friendly smile...
Her natural glow...
Now here was a person Pete wanted to know!
He asked her inside
His mom piled the bed up
To give her the test that had Pete truly fed up
Her natural glow...
Now here was a person Pete wanted to know!
He asked her inside
His mom piled the bed up
To give her the test that had Pete truly fed up
“This pea stuff!” Pete spluttered. “You’re always so pushy!”
“Who cares if the girl has a sensitive tushy?!”
“Who cares if the girl has a sensitive tushy?!”
But he knew that his mom glorified the elite
So to marry this girl he might just have to cheat
So just when his houseguest was washing her face
He took out the pea...
And put a squash in its place
So to marry this girl he might just have to cheat
So just when his houseguest was washing her face
He took out the pea...
And put a squash in its place
But next morning, weirdly, the girl simply said
“I’m really enjoying this mile-high bed!”
The queen looked annoyed. “Not a princess, I see.”
The worried prince begged her for leniency.
“I’m really enjoying this mile-high bed!”
The queen looked annoyed. “Not a princess, I see.”
The worried prince begged her for leniency.
And later when evening was starting to fall
He switched out the squash for his dad’s bowling ball
He switched out the squash for his dad’s bowling ball
But next day, more thank you’s!
Our poor prince was shaken
And knew that this night drastic steps must be taken
Our poor prince was shaken
And knew that this night drastic steps must be taken
So just as the girl said good night to the queen
He lifted a mattress and squeezed in between
And all through the night, hardly taking a breather
He wiggled and wriggled and kicked underneath her.
He lifted a mattress and squeezed in between
And all through the night, hardly taking a breather
He wiggled and wriggled and kicked underneath her.
The prince felt her toss
Heard her groan "What the heck?"
In the morning he noticed her rubbing her neck
Still, when asked by the queen if she’d had a good rest
The girl simply beamed and said “It was the best!”
Heard her groan "What the heck?"
In the morning he noticed her rubbing her neck
Still, when asked by the queen if she’d had a good rest
The girl simply beamed and said “It was the best!”
Prince Pete was confounded. Confused! Mystified!
He decided to fess up and ask if she’d lied.
She looked disbelieving. “Of course! I’m a guest!
When asked if I slept well I always say yes!”
He decided to fess up and ask if she’d lied.
She looked disbelieving. “Of course! I’m a guest!
When asked if I slept well I always say yes!”
Prince Pete couldn’t help it; he asked for her hand
She shook her head sadly, said “Please understand...”
She shook her head sadly, said “Please understand...”
“Someday I might marry (right now I’m all set)
But I’m not going to marry a guy I just met
And even a girl who’d get hitched in a hurry
Might find your MOTHER a real source of worry.
But I’m not going to marry a guy I just met
And even a girl who’d get hitched in a hurry
Might find your MOTHER a real source of worry.
But I could use a friend, and some laughs, and a talk
So how about this... Let’s start with a walk?”
So how about this... Let’s start with a walk?”
#10 Goldilockup
“Someone has been sleeping in my bed!” exclaimed Papa Bear.
“Someone has been sleeping in my bed!” exclaimed Mama Bear.
“Someone has been sleeping in my bed!” exclaimed Baby Bear. “And
there she is!”
At that, Goldilocks awoke with a shriek, jumped out the window,
and ran away as fast as she could.
But it wasn’t fast enough. Before she could disappear into the
forest, a large hand clamped down on her shoulder and slapped on the cuffs.
The man was in uniform. He scowled at Goldilocks and spoke into
his crackling walkie talkie. “I got her,” he growled. “I’ll be downtown in
ten.”
Then he turned to Golidlocks. “You’re coming with me, blondie.”
“What? Why?”
“Breaking and entering, grand theft porridge, vandalism,
squatting… You’re a regular crime wave, kid.”
And into the squad car she went.
“You punks are all alike,” the officer said once they arrived at
the station. “You always think you’re the hero.”
He pointed to a boy getting his mug shot. “See that kid? He
thinks he’s a hero, too. But he’s been charged with murder, burglary, and
chopping down a giant beanstalk without a forestry permit. He ain’t no hero,
girlie, and neither are you.”
Goldilocks was shoved into a holding cell. She was terrified by
the lowlifes who surrounded her. There was a woodsman who practiced stomach
surgery without a license. Pigs who attempted to boil their dinners alive.
Prince charmings found carrying unregistered swords and daggers. Billy goats
accused of assault and battery.
It was a motley crew.
“What’s going to happen now?” Goldilocks asked the officer.
“Well, first we gotta catch up with Cinderella and Snow White,”
he replied.
“What are they wanted for?” she asked.
“Oh,” the man replied, “we’ll come up with something.”
At that moment, another officer shouted in triumph. “We got
‘em!”
A joyous “Whoop!” went up throughout the precinct as Snow White
and Cinderella were booked, photographed, fingerprinted, and tossed in the cell
with the others.
“A good day’s work, gentlemen!” said the police captain emerging
from his office. He wasn’t exactly a police captain, though.
He was a Big Bad Wolf.
The officers then pulled off their masks.
Giants!
Ogres!
Stepmothers!
Goldilocks and the other prisoners shuddered at the sight.
It was official: Fairy Tale Forest was under new management.
Please vote for the one you think deserves to win by Sunday March 30 at 5 PM EDT. Winners will be announced on Monday March 31!!
Thank you all so much for reading and voting! I can't wait to see who the winners are!!!
Have a terrific Thursday and a wonderful weekend!
See you Monday with the winners :)
What an awesome bunch of stories!!! I voted but it was hard to do! :D
ReplyDeleteGoodness! No wonder you had such a hard time choosing! Here, have some endless chocolate fondue to keep your strength up. ;)
ReplyDeleteVoted, but you're a meanie for making us suffer with you. LOL!
Wow- it was hard to choose. Some great entries here. Wonderful job, people!
ReplyDeleteThanks so much for voting, Erik! I know it was hard! Choosing the finalists was practically impossible!
ReplyDeleteAh! Thank you for the fondue! I will be needing it to sustain me this morning as I am barely awake and have to leave for a school visit in 10 minutes! And misery loves company :)
ReplyDeleteThanks, Iza! Glad you enjoyed them!
ReplyDeleteThese were tough choices! Really love them all - great job, everyone!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Pat! Great job to you too!
ReplyDeleteTen great stories...one tough choice! :0)
ReplyDeleteThanks for whittling the field down for us . . . and for hosting the contest . . . and for being such a fun place to visit.
ReplyDeleteAnd Congrats to all the finalists. I voted for . . . NOT TELLING!
Wow! Thank you thank you thank you! I am delighted (and more than a bit surprised)!
ReplyDeleteThanks for another great contest, Susanna! I don't envy your job, though!
ReplyDeleteFun, fun, fun!
ReplyDeleteTen terrific tales and I took my time to choose! Well done all the finalists!
ReplyDeleteCongratulations to all the finalists. Reading the entries again was fun, but tough to choose just one. I can't imagine how dizzying the task was of whittling down to just 10! Good luck, everyone!
ReplyDeleteCongratulations everyone and thank you for hosting Susanna!
ReplyDeleteI thought I had a favorite but they were all so darn good! (I closed my eyes and picked one. Not quite sure what--:-)
ReplyDeleteCongratulations to all the finalists! Thanks Susanna for such a fun contest, I can't imagine what you and your staff went through to get the list down to 10. It's going to be hard to choose just one! Good luck to all the finalists!
ReplyDeleteMy vote is in! Again good luck everyone!
ReplyDeleteUnbelievable talent and creativity, Susanna! Wow! They are all unique, each in their own way. No wonder you all have lost sleep. It's difficult to choose even from ten. But, I will do it! Thanks for hosting this. I hope to join you next time, when life isn't so busy!😜
ReplyDeleteTen amazing choices...I'm going to have to reread them again...are you sure we can only pick one? :)
ReplyDeleteCongratulations to all the finalists!
ReplyDeleteGreat selection, Susanna! Congrats to the finalists it was a fun read.
ReplyDeleteI read some of the others as well last week. You really had your work cut out for you! These are all pretty great. It's hard to choose from these ten, but I did vote.
ReplyDeleteWow! So much talent here. Congrats to all. :)
ReplyDeleteThey really were a fantastic bunch of stories, all so good in their own way! I really hate having to choose - it's the only thing I don't like about these contests - because everyone does such a good job and they all deserve recognition!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Eva! Yours was wonderful too. I wish I could pick everyone! :)
ReplyDeleteThanks, Catherine! For the record, I thought your entry was one of the best you've ever submitted - we really liked it, Judge 3 in particular - and I wish we could pick more finalists!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Alena! And congratulations to you on a very fun story - we all enjoyed Roberella!
ReplyDeleteAlas, yes, only one! The same agony we had trying to choose 10 finalists out of 75 amazing entries. We loved Singerella - such fun that she was a bird!
ReplyDeleteThanks so much for reading and voting, Jarm - we absolutely couldn't do this without readers and voters! And I'll look forward to an entry form you for the nest one (which I already know has a GREAT prize! :))
ReplyDeleteAwh thanks. Maybe that's because I already had the general idea before the contest. I'm not good at pressure writing. Like March Madness lol.
ReplyDeleteThanks so much for reading and voting, Karen, and for a fabulous entry that we really enjoyed!
ReplyDeleteSo much talent and creativity here. Cast my vote, Congratulations to all those who submitted -- you're all winners.
ReplyDeleteMaybe that's what I should have done - put all the stories in a hat and picked out 10 blindfolded! :)
ReplyDeleteThank you for participating, Lauri! We can always count on you for a great story! :)
ReplyDeleteThanks for reading and voting, Julie! And yes, we read all 75 entries so many times I think I could recite a lot of them :) It's so hard to choose when the entries are all so good!
ReplyDeleteThank you for reading and voting, Joanna, and for a terrific story that we all enjoyed!
ReplyDeleteGlad you think so, Kirsten! :)
ReplyDeleteYeah... the narrowing down to finalists is the only part of this I don't like. I wish I could pick everyone!
ReplyDeleteYou're entirely welcome, Nancy, and thank YOU for visiting and reading and commenting and voting and for liking my blog :) We're still talking about your story - I would not want to end up on Mizzie's bad side! :)
ReplyDeleteI know it's hard! I hope you'll be able to choose! Thanks so much for coming to read (and hopefully vote) Donna :)
ReplyDeleteThe most fun was reading all of the 75...I shared quite a few with my hubby who appreciates wickedly funny stories. :)
ReplyDeleteI know! There were some great ones I hated to cut!
ReplyDeleteI know! Everyone is amazing! So many fantastic stories!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Coleen! I know they all appreciate you reading!
ReplyDeleteSusanna, you totally got me at the beginning of the post. I was reading it on my phone, and I thought, "Oh no! I want to know now!" The best part of this competition was getting a chance to read so many amazing stories. Good luck to the finalists!
ReplyDeleteHehehe :) I'm glad you enjoyed it, Telaina! We certainly all loved your story! :)
ReplyDeleteI voted. I loved these. I loved MOONGOOSE'S HOLI PARTY" and "GOLDIBAWKS." But please do not think it was an easy decision. They were so hard. I loved so many of them. Kudos to all who entered.
ReplyDeleteSusanna, these were wonderful. so hard to choose, but I did.
ReplyDeleteCongrats to you all! It was tough picking a winner!!! :D
ReplyDeleteI know, Jackie! It was a TOUGH choice! Everyone did a fabulous job, including you! Thanks for reading and voting :)
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for reading and voting, Ann - such a crucial part of the contests!
ReplyDeleteIt was an amazing turnout, wasn't it, Elaine? I am convinced that the overall quality of entries gets better with every contest!
ReplyDeleteAmazing! I couldn't agree more! :)
ReplyDeleteno problem :D I enjoyed it.
ReplyDeleteI am soooo behind, I never got to read the first round. But I sat down today and read these with my 8 year old - he liked Little Red Riding Hood and the Tiny Rude Bunny the best. They were ALL really good though. It really is amazing how many different stories these fairy tales can inspire.
ReplyDeleteIt really is amazing, Carrie! There are 10 versions of Goldilocks and 8 of Little Red Riding Hood and they're all so different! I always like knowing what the kid picks are :)
ReplyDeletewow! These are great, susanna :) I had a hard time, myself, but chose one :) Good Luck to you all!
ReplyDeleteThere were so many great ones - it was very hard to choose! Thanks so much for reading and voting, Denise, and congrats on a delightful story!
ReplyDeleteIt was so nice of you to have the contest, susanna :) Thanks so much for the chance :)
ReplyDeleteAre you kidding? I love running these contests! It's so much fun to see how creative everyone is, and get to go visit blog after blog to read great stories and meet new people! The only thing I don't like is having to choose finalists!
ReplyDeleteI loved reading the different retellings of the fairy tales :)
ReplyDeleteCongrats to all the finalists. I enjoyed each and every entry and it was terribly hard to chose just one!
ReplyDeleteWhat a bunch of fun stories! Congratulations to all of you for what you've accomplished here. A great contest as usual, Susanna!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Michelle, but it is truly the writers who step up and share their wonderful stories that make these contests so much fun! :)
ReplyDeleteJust voted! It was actually my favorite...and my hubby's! Looking forward to Monday and the BIG REVEAL.:)
ReplyDeleteHooray for the Top Ten! It was so hard to choose!
ReplyDeleteI wish you could vote for your top three. I went with the one I simply enjoyed the most, but there were others that impressed me as well...one that wasn't my usual favorite subject but what was so well-written that it was a VERY close second and another that was so much fun!
ReplyDeleteWould you consider,with permission, using some of the ones that didn't work as teaching tools on your blog; using the reasons you gave above, such as: these last two lines didn't work, or this was too dark, too adult, for kids, lack of plot, etc. I would love some feedback or examples. Just a thought!
ReplyDeletecongratulations to all the winners!!!
ReplyDeleteThanks for reading and voting, Vivian! And I'm looking forward to seeing who will win too!
ReplyDeleteIt was hard choosing all around, Pat! Thanks so much for reading and voting!
ReplyDeleteWell done, finalists. Read and voted. Lots of fun reading here, but one clever story really tickled my absurdist funny bone. :)
ReplyDeleteCongrats to you too, Nata, for an entertaining entry :)
ReplyDeleteThat's a good idea, Anne, and I would consider it. I'd have to get permission first, though, because I'd be specifically and publicly pointing out flaws in people's work which I'm not entirely comfortable with and I'm not sure they would be either...
ReplyDeleteI know. The choosing is so hard. We have the same problem judging, because there are often entries that are very well written that might not be our first choice of how to treat the topic but they deserve a place on the list, and then others that we love the way the topic was treated but the writing isn't as strong. Always tough choices!
ReplyDeleteThanks so much for reading and voting, Renee! The choosing is really hard with so many good stories!
ReplyDeletecongratulations everyone. All the stories were terrific. :) I look forward to the next contest. :)
ReplyDeleteThey really were a great bunch, weren't they Cecilia? Thanks so much for reading and voting!
ReplyDeleteI really, really wish we could pick our THREE favorites. ;)
ReplyDeleteVote in... good luck to all!
ReplyDeleteWonderful entries! I just voted. Can't wait to see you wins. :-)
ReplyDeleteI meant "to see who wins". LOL
ReplyDeleteGreat job everybody. Good luck. It was difficult, but my vote is in.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Genevieve! :)
ReplyDeleteMe either! Thanks for voting, Tracy :)
ReplyDeleteThanks, Juliana! :)
ReplyDeleteIf I could ever figure out a way to work that, maybe you could :)
ReplyDeleteThey are all wonderful stories. So hard to decide! ❤️😊
ReplyDeleteI know! It's like Sophie's Choice multiplied :)
ReplyDeleteGreat stories! Made choosing just one a true dilemma. Came down to Rock, Paper...daggonit...PICK!
ReplyDeleteIt was such a tough choice, I know Stacy! Thanks for reading and voting :)
ReplyDeleteIt was tough but I voted. there were so many good ones! I guess I should have done rock, paper and sceissors but I didn't think of it, so took my best guess. Lots of good stories, there. Congrats, you finalists! :)
ReplyDeleteEverybody did a terrific job (although we missed you, Clar!) Thanks so much for reading and voting! :)
ReplyDeleteIt was so hard to choose!!! Wonderful job everyone!!!
ReplyDeleteYou too, Kristen! We loved your story :) Thanks so much for reading and voting!
ReplyDeleteI voted for the one my nine-year-old daughter likes best. It's my favorite too. But there are things I LOVE in many of the stories.
ReplyDeleteI love that you shared with your daughter! After all, it's kids we're writing for. I'm glad there was one she really liked. Thanks so much to both of you for reading and voting! (And I would love to know privately which one she loved - I'm always interested in knowing which ones speak to kids!)
ReplyDeleteOh, it was HARD...but I finally pulled the trigger. So much talent! I love how you keep the finalists anonymous, Susanna.
ReplyDeleteCongratulations to all the finalists!!!
ReplyDeleteI already had a top two in mind, but neither of those made it to the finals. Decisions, decisions. It was hard to choose. (Though much harder for Susanna, right?) Thanks S L H. Great contest!
It's so hard to choose the finalists! There are always people whose stories I love that end up getting cut. We have three judges for a reason! I'm sorry neither of your top two made it, Joanne... maybe at least one of them will show up in the Honorable Mentions tomorrow :)
ReplyDeleteWhy thank you :) I never turn down chocolate :) And have you checked the winners post from today? Maybe your favorites showed up in the HMs :)
ReplyDelete