Where Can I Find Fanfiction Titled Red In Tooth And Claw?

2025-10-28 18:57:02 278

7 Answers

Ella
Ella
2025-10-29 00:53:05
I usually go surgical about this: type the title in quotes like "'Red in Tooth and Claw'" into Google with site-specific operators (for example site:archiveofourown.org or site:fanfiction.net) to restrict results to known archives. If that doesn't return anything, broaden the terms—drop the quotes or search for memorable phrases or character names from the story. Check AO3's advanced search by title, and try alternative spellings or punctuation (hyphens, colons). I also comb through Tumblr tags and use Reddit searches—communities sometimes mirror works or keep links when authors remove them. When a story has been taken down, the Internet Archive/Wayback Machine and Google Cache are my go-tos: paste the suspected URL or search results into the Wayback Machine and see snapshots. If you find an author's profile, check their other posts or linked socials; authors sometimes host or repost deleted works elsewhere. It’s methodical, but I enjoy the detective work and usually turn up something useful.
Riley
Riley
2025-10-29 17:10:08
Lately I've been tracking down obscure fics as a hobby, so I have a few semi-ritualized tricks for locating a piece called 'red in tooth and claw'. First, I do a global Google search with quotes: "'red in tooth and claw' fanfiction" and then try site-limited searches like site:archiveofourown.org "'red in tooth and claw'" or site:fanfiction.net "'red in tooth and claw'". That helps separate works with the exact phrase from blog posts or reviews.

If those searches are empty, I pivot: search by likely fandom tags and character names, or hunt for lines that might be unique to the story. People often reference a memorable sentence in reviews or rec posts. If I can find the author’s username on one site, I search that username across platforms — authors tend to keep similar handles on AO3, Tumblr, and Twitter. For deleted works, the Internet Archive or cached Google pages sometimes preserve snippets. I also check community-curated recommendation lists and Discord servers for the fandom; someone there might have saved a copy. Tracking fics this way scratches my investigative itch, and when I finally find a hidden gem like that, it feels rewarding and cozy.
Zander
Zander
2025-10-30 03:10:02
Quick checklist from my stash of tips: search the exact title 'red in tooth and claw' in quotes across AO3, FanFiction.net, and Wattpad first; those hosts have the highest probability. If nothing shows, broaden to Tumblr, Reddit, and Tumbex-style reblog archives — readers often link to fics they loved. I usually try site-specific Google searches (site:archiveofourown.org "'red in tooth and claw'"), plus variations in capitalization and punctuation because authors sometimes stylize titles differently.

If a title remains elusive, I look for the author’s handle anywhere I can find it, then search that handle across platforms; deleted works sometimes survive on secondary blogs or the Wayback Machine. Also consider that 'red in tooth and claw' might be a chapter title inside a bigger work rather than the work’s main title, so skim chapter lists if you find likely authors. I enjoy the spectacle of the chase more than I probably should — finding a lost fic always feels like rediscovering a favorite song.
Violet
Violet
2025-10-30 06:11:23
Quick checklist from my bookish, slightly obsessive brain: search AO3 (use title search and filters), FanFiction.net, and Wattpad first. Use Google with quotes: "'Red in Tooth and Claw'" and site:archiveofourown.org (or replace with other sites) to narrow it down. If those fail, try Tumblr tags, Dreamwidth/LiveJournal, and Reddit fandom communities where people often mirror or link to works. The Wayback Machine is invaluable for deleted pages—paste suspected URLs or search results directly into it.

A tiny tip I swear by: search a unique sentence fragment in quotes; that often surfaces reblogs or reposts. Also remember multiple stories can share that title, so check the fandom and content warnings. I’ve rescued lost fics this way and it’s oddly satisfying every time.
Aaron
Aaron
2025-10-31 03:40:39
On a more casual note, I like a community-sourced approach—posting a short description (no spoilers) in a fandom subreddit, a relevant Tumblr tag, or a Discord group often gets faster results than blind searching. Say you can recall a scene or line from 'Red in Tooth and Claw' or even the approximate wordcount and whether it was completed; drop those details when asking. People love playing sleuth. I once mentioned a line and someone DM'd me a perfectly formatted AO3 link within minutes.

Beyond asking around, try searching for the title alongside likely fandom terms or character names on Google, then check results on AO3, FanFiction.net, Wattpad, Dreamwidth, and LiveJournal. If nothing shows, try the Wayback Machine with suspected URLs or search results—archived pages often exist even when originals vanish. Be mindful that multiple distinct works can share that title, so double-check the fandom, pairing, and chapter list before celebrating. I always feel a nice buzz when the community helps me relocate a beloved fic.
Henry
Henry
2025-11-02 23:02:02
If you're hunting for the fanfic titled 'red in tooth and claw', I usually start with the big, obvious libraries and then work outward. I first check Archive of Our Own (AO3) because so many writers prefer its tagging and search — type the title in quotes in the AO3 search box, and then play with filters like fandom, rating, and whether it's a one-shot or a chaptered work. If that comes up dry, FanFiction.net and Wattpad are the next stops; they each have less-refined search tools but lots of older or crossover work lives there.

Beyond the major archives, I scan Tumblr and Reddit (search the title in quotes on Reddit or look through fandom-specific subreddits). Deleted or long-ago-removed fics sometimes turn up in people’s reblogs or in reading lists. The Wayback Machine can be a lifesaver for stuff that was taken down years ago — paste the direct URL if you have it, or search by an author's username if you find one linked elsewhere.

If the title is common, try searching variations and punctuation: 'Red in Tooth & Claw', 'Red in Tooth and Claw', or even just 'red in tooth' with the author's name or a key character. I also look for crossposts: authors often repost to Tumblr, ScribbleHub, or Patreon. Personally, I love the thrill of tracking a rare fic through bookmarks and reblogs; it's like a tiny treasure hunt and worth the effort.
Hazel
Hazel
2025-11-03 01:39:33
Hunting down a particular fanfic can feel like a treasure hunt, and I got surprisingly invested when I went after 'Red in Tooth and Claw' a while back. I usually start with the big archives: Archive of Our Own (AO3), FanFiction.net, and Wattpad. On AO3 I used the title field in advanced search and filtered by fandom and character names I suspected were involved; if you know the pairing or a keyword, that cuts the noise. I also tried Google with site:archiveofourown.org "'Red in Tooth and Claw'" and then repeated for fanfiction.net and wattpad.com to catch cross-posts.

If those fail, go wider: Tumblr tags, Dreamwidth, LiveJournal, and even Reddit's fandom subreddits often have re-uploads or links. I once found an author who deleted their AO3 post but kept a Tumblr backup—searching for a unique phrase from a remembered scene in quotes can surface reblogs or quotes. The Internet Archive's Wayback Machine is a life-saver for removed pages; paste the old AO3/Fic link if you have it and see if an archived snapshot exists. Personally, I eventually recovered that fic via a mix of site: searches and the Wayback Machine, and it felt like finding a lost mixtape—warm and wildly satisfying.
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