“Zelle, don’t worry, I’ll protect you!” Zach caressed her hair as tears fell on her cheeks.
“Y-you—you are not my knight in shining armor… This is not a fairytale!”
Aaron held her hand away from Zach. “I can be your prince if you want to...”
Zelle fell on her knees bursting into tears, “Please stop! I—I don’t want to see you two in one of those boxes too!”
18 people she cares about…
18 days left before her 18th birthday…
Each day onward she receives bloody gifts containing disembodied parts…
Which candle our Little Zelle will blow on the day of her birthday?
“Happy Birthday to me…”
~~~~
* Original Novel
* Original Book Cover
* Copyrights Reserved
Kisa Becker loved Gilbert Kooper with great care. In Gilbert's mind, however, she was a cunning and evil plotter.After marrying him, she believed if she played the role of Mrs. Kooper well, she could eventually win his heart. Little did she expect that man to send her to prison, where a fire burned her years of infatuation with him into ashes.When the two met again after her near-death experience, Gilbert realized her affection for him had long gone. And now it was his turn to be distraught.
A retelling of several of the most famous fairy tales with a kinky, dirty twist. Each story is about 30,000 words so sit back, grab some holy water and relax! It's time to sink in 10 deliciously dark and twisted fairytales! Highly erotic and brimming with dark desires, don't say I didn't warn ya!
18+ Dark Fairytale Series
Rumpled (Retelling of Rumplestiltskin)
Sinderella (Retelling of Cinderella)
Allissa in Wankerland (Retelling of Alice In Wonderland)
Friends With Sexy Benefits (Retelling of Hansel and Gretel)
Snow White and the Seven Hunks (Retelling of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs)
Red (Retelling of Little Red Riding Hood)
Tangled (Retelling of Rapunzel)
Bella and the Beast (Beauty and The Beast)
Maid For Pleasure (The Ugly Duckling)
Goldilocks and the 3 Were-bears (Goldilocks)
Fayyadh Rizqi - Nur Qaseh Maisarah!!
Nur Qaseh Maisarah - Selamat tinggal Fayyadh!
Nur Qaseh Maisarah, nama seindah orangnya. Tetapi, nasib selalu tidak menyebelahinya. Dia selalu bernasib malang dalam bab percintaan.
Ammar Mukhriz - Qaseh, awak terlalu baik untuk saya.
Setiap lelaki yang datang dalam hidupnya bagaikan hanya sebuah persinggahan. Dia tidak jauh berbeza dengan hentian rehat di R&R.
Hafiz Amsyar - Saya akan jadi orang pertama yang akan datang meminang awak.
Setiap yang datang akan memberi harapan dan janji-janji yang belum pasti. Dia juga bodoh kerana terlalu cepat percaya. Padahal sudah banyak kali terkena.
Fidaiy - Qaseh, are you okay?
Iman - Will you marry me?
Kehadiran Fidaiy mencuit lagi hatinya. Sikap mengambil berat yang dipamerkan oleh lelaki itu membuatkan dia sentiasa rasa selamat.
Pada masa yang sama, teman lamanya kembali menghubungi dia dan menyatakan hasratnya yang sudah lama berputik.
Siapakah yang akan memiliki hatinya?
Pada siapakah yang harus dia percaya?
Adakah dia bakal menjadi tempat persinggahan untuk ke sekian kalinya?
Segalanya bakal terungkai di dalam “Akhiri Kisah Cinta Ku”.
"I'm finally free!" Kiera, who was a Modern Rapunzel, finally became independent and out of her comfort zone! However, the day before her housewarming party as a celebration of her freedom, she got into an accident... or was it?
"Is fate playing tricks on me? I don't mind dying but can't I at least die after I experience my first own party instead of my funeral?!"
Seeing her lifeless body surrounded by her blood, she can't help but feel remorse.
Feeling helpless, she followed the light shined next to her thinking it was the way to the underworld.
...she was wrong.
"I think I got the wrong turn..."
"Welcome players to the Enchantrix game!"
_______
[Update: 1 to 2 chapters a week]
[Leafy gives, upspree every ending of each arc]
[Book Cover Artist: KircheLeaf]
_______
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Being a fresh university graduate, all that Claire needs is an adventure of a lifetime. Her life as a beautiful Rapunzel in the castle is something any woman her age would desire to have, but she knows what's hidden behind her exorbitant smile. But everything changes on one stormy evening.He'll appear like a knight in shining armor, and then he'll stay like a King of her heart. Healing and destroying her at the same time will become his ability, but eternity with him will become her heartfelt wish, even though her question remains unanswered--Is it love?
There’s a lot packed into the old Brothers Grimm 'Rapunzel' once you start stacking variants side-by-side, and I love how messy folk tales are. In the Grimms’ version the story opens with a husband-and-wife craving a garden plant called rapunzel (rampion), the wife steals it from a witch’s garden while pregnant, the witch claims the baby, names her Rapunzel, and locks her in a tower with no stairs. A prince discovers Rapunzel by hearing her sing and climbing her hair. They secretly meet, fall into a physical relationship that leads to pregnancy, the witch catches them, cuts Rapunzel’s hair and casts her out into the wilderness, and the prince is blinded when he falls from the tower. Rapunzel gives birth to twins, wanders for years, then her tears restore the prince’s sight and they reunite.
What’s different in other versions is eye-opening: Italian 'Petrosinella' (Basile) and French 'Persinette' (de la Force) predate the Grimms and have darker or more cunning heroines, with trickery and magical items playing bigger roles. Modern retellings like Disney’s 'Tangled' sanitize and rework motives — the plant becomes a healing flower, Rapunzel becomes a kidnapped princess with agency, the sexual element is removed, and the ending is more explicitly romantic. Also, scholars file the tale under ATU 310 'The Maiden in the Tower', which helps explain recurring bits (tower, hair, secret visits), but each culture emphasizes different morals: punishment, motherhood, or female cleverness. If you want the gritty original feel, read the Grimms and then compare Basile — it’s fascinating how the same skeleton can wear wildly different clothes.
There’s something about that locked tower image that always hooks me—the immediate visual of someone elevated and unreachable is basically a storytelling cheat code. In the original 'Rapunzel' the tower motif works on so many levels: it’s literal imprisonment, a rite-of-passage container, and a symbol for social isolation. Writers keep lifting that motif because it so easily becomes metaphoric space for childhood leaving, gendered confinement, or spiritual retreat.
Beyond the tower, a few other motifs get recycled in almost every retelling. Hair as both lifeline and sexual symbol (the long hair that becomes a rope), the witch or guardian who controls access, the cutting of hair as a turning point, and the blindness-and-restoration arc where the lover loses sight and then regains it through tears. There’s also the pregnancy/twin-born exile motif in the Grimms’ version that injects bodily consequences and lineage into the story, which modern authors twist into narratives about motherhood, inheritance, or trauma. As a fan, I love how these elements can be riffed—hair becomes magic in 'Tangled', the tower becomes a workshop or refuge in other takes, and the witch can be a villain, a protector, or something messier in between.
I've always been the kind of person who dives into the backstories of stories, and 'Rapunzel' is one I love tracing. The version most people think of was collected and published by Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm — the Brothers Grimm — in their landmark collection 'Kinder- und Hausmärchen' (first edition 1812). They gathered tales from oral storytellers across Germany and then shaped them into the form we now recognize.
What fascinates me is how the Grimms didn't invent these stories so much as record and edit them. 'Rapunzel' in their book (KHM 12) reflects oral traditions but also pulls on older written variants from Europe, like Giambattista Basile's 'Petrosinella' and Charlotte-Rose de Caumont de La Force's 'Persinette'. I like imagining the Grimms at a kitchen table, scribbling notes while an anonymous village storyteller recounted hair, towers, and lost princes. It makes reading their collected tales feel like eavesdropping on history, and each version I find gives me some new detail to treasure.
I came across 'Rapunzel: A Happenin’ Rap' a while back while digging into quirky retellings of classic fairy tales, and it’s such a fun twist! The book’s author is David Vozar, who had this brilliant idea to blend the traditional Rapunzel story with a hip-hop vibe. It’s part of a series where he reimagines fairy tales with a modern, rhythmic flair—like 'Cinderella: A Hip-Hop Fairy Tale' and 'Yo, Hungry Wolf!'. Vozar’s style is playful and energetic, perfect for kids who love music or just something different from the usual bedtime stories.
What really stands out is how he keeps the essence of the original tale while injecting so much personality into it. The illustrations by Randy Duburke are vibrant and full of movement, matching the book’s lively tone. It’s one of those books that makes you smile just flipping through it. If you’re into creative adaptations or looking for something to read aloud with a beat, this one’s a gem.
I get why you'd want to know — I used to peel open DVD cases at yard sales to see what extras were hiding inside. For 'Barbie as Rapunzel' there isn't a big, well-known stash of theatrical deleted scenes floating around like you might find for grown-up blockbusters. What usually shows up for these movies are small cuts: trimmed lines, shortened transitions, or alternate storyboards and animatics rather than fully animated deleted sequences.
On the DVD and later digital releases you'll sometimes find bonus features like music videos, behind-the-scenes featurettes, or story reels. Those story reels can feel like deleted scenes because they show parts that were planned but not fully animated. If you want the clearest path: inspect the Special Features listing on whatever release you're looking at (regional DVDs can differ), and keep an eye on collector forums or YouTube for uploads labeled as animatics or deleted scenes.
I’ve found one or two short storyboard clips years ago that felt like glimpses of cut content, but not a whole alternate scene that changes the story. If you want, I can point to the venues I usually check (collector sites, archived DVD menus, and certain fan channels) — it’s a bit of a treasure hunt, and that’s half the fun for me.
If you're hunting for 'Rapunzel Tangled Adventure,' Disney+ is your best bet! I binged the entire series there last summer, and it's such a gem—filled with that same charm as the original movie but with deeper character arcs and new adventures. The platform even has the 'Tangled' short film 'Before Ever After,' which bridges the gap between the movie and the series.
For folks without Disney+, you might find some episodes on YouTube or digital purchase platforms like Amazon Prime Video, but Disney+ is the most reliable. It's wild how much the show expands Rapunzel's world—Eugene's sarcasm, Cassandra's complexity, and those musical numbers? Pure magic. I still hum 'Wind in My Hair' randomly.
I've read so many 'Tangled' fanfictions that weave 'I See the Light' into Rapunzel and Flynn's relationship, and it’s honestly magical how authors use those lyrics. The song’s themes of awakening and realization mirror their emotional journeys perfectly. Some fics set moments under lantern light, quoting lines like "All at once everything looks different" to show Flynn’s shift from selfishness to selflessness. Others have Rapunzel humming the tune while painting, tying it to her freedom and newfound love. The lyrics become a shared language between them, a way to express what they can’t say outright. One fic even had Flynn whisper "Now I’m here, suddenly I see" during a quiet campfire scene, and it hit harder than any confession. The repetition of light imagery in fics—lanterns, sunrises, sparks—echoes the song’s central metaphor, grounding their bond in something tangible yet poetic.
Another layer I adore is how authors contrast the song’s optimism with darker moments. In angstier fics, broken snippets of lyrics—"What I’ve been dreaming of"—linger in Rapunzel’s thoughts after fights, underscoring her longing for connection. Flynn’s POV often uses the song’s crescendo to mark his acceptance of love, like a soundtrack to his vulnerability. The best part? It never feels forced. The lyrics are woven into dialogue, inner monologues, or even letters, making their relationship feel richer. Some writers take it further, crafting AU where the song exists in-universe, and Flynn sings it clumsily to make her laugh. It’s those little details that turn a Disney reference into emotional depth.
I've always been fascinated by how 'Tangled' fanfics weave the lyrics of 'I See the Light' into Rapunzel and Flynn's love story. The song’s imagery—lanterns, light, and revelation—becomes a metaphor for their emotional awakening. Some fics use the moment they sing it as a turning point, where Flynn’s guarded heart finally opens. Others stretch the lyrics across the entire narrative, letting each line mirror their growing trust. The lantern scene, for instance, is often expanded into a private, intimate moment where Flynn admits his fears, and Rapunzel’s vulnerability shines.
Another layer is how authors reinterpret the lyrics post-canon. Flynn’s 'all at once everything looks different' becomes a recurring theme in marriage or parenthood fics, where he sees Rapunzel in new ways. Some darker AUs twist the 'light' into literal salvation—Rapunzel healing Flynn’s wounds, or him guiding her through trauma. The song’s duality (light vs. darkness) lets writers explore their dynamic deeply, whether fluffy or angsty. It’s not just about romance; it’s about how love transforms perception, and fanfics nail that.
That enchanted painting in 'Barbie as Rapunzel' isn't just a pretty backdrop—it's practically the secret heartbeat of the whole story. I love how it weaves magic and mystery into Rapunzel’s daily life. At first glance, it seems like a simple family portrait, but the way it reacts to her emotions? Genius. It cracks open when she’s upset, revealing hidden pathways that literally change her world. The painting becomes this silent confidant, almost like it’s alive, nudging her toward self-discovery. And let’s talk symbolism—the fractured surface mirrors Rapunzel’s fractured understanding of her past, while the golden light spilling through hints at hope. It’s wild how a single object can hold so much narrative weight, guiding her to reunite with her lost family and break free from Gothel’s lies.
What really gets me is how the painting subverts expectations. Instead of just being a passive clue, it actively participates in her journey. When she touches it during pivotal moments, the magic responds—almost like it’s acknowledging her growth. Compared to other fairy tale MacGuffins, this one feels personal. It’s not just a key to the plot; it’s a bridge between Rapunzel’s loneliness and her destiny. Plus, the visual payoff when it finally fully restores? Chills. That moment where the cracks heal as she embraces her truth is such a satisfying metaphor for wholeness.
there’s this one called 'Golden Chains' that absolutely nails Flynn’s protective side. The story throws Rapunzel into a political conspiracy in Corona, and Flynn’s desperation to shield her is visceral. He’s not just swinging swords; his fear for her is woven into every decision, like when he sacrifices his own freedom to divert assassins. The author captures his voice perfectly—cocky but fraying at the edges under pressure.
Another gem is 'Ember in the Dark,' where Rapunzel gets kidnapped by a cult obsessed with her hair. Flynn’s rage here is quieter but sharper. He methodically dismantles the cult, and there’s a scene where he bandages her wrists after she’s tied up—his hands shake. It’s those small details that gut me. The fic balances action with emotional weight, showing how his protection isn’t just physical but about preserving her spirit too.