The Grimm Diaries Prequels Books in Order
Part ofCameron Jace Books in OrderExplore The Grimm Diaries Prequels by Cameron Jace in order, with short summaries, series background, and reading guidance.
Last updated: June 9, 2026
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Publication Order
1 book
Snow White Blood Red
by Cameron Jace
2012
The so called Evil Queen tells her side of the Snow White story while old truths rot underneath the Grimm version everyone knows. It is a short, dark opening that reframes Sorrow's most feared mother and daughter.
Series background & context
The Grimm Diaries Prequels takes the idea of the single setup novella and expands it into a whole myth making machine. This is the wider prequel project, a large collection of short books and bundles that keep returning to the same question. What if the story everyone remembers is the lie, and the forgotten version is the one with teeth?
Like the first prequel set, these books usually come as diary entries, confessions, or voice driven snapshots. Different fairy tale figures take turns telling their side. Some are familiar right away, like the Queen, Prince Charming, Peter Pan, or Little Red Riding Hood. Others come in from the edges of folklore and nursery rhyme and make the world feel much bigger than just one princess tale.
That wider scope is the point. The prequels do not simply fill gaps. They keep building the web around Sorrow, the Lost Seven, buried names, cursed objects, old bargains, and the many characters who were touched by the same hidden history. A short book about one figure often turns out to be part of a much larger chain, and the pleasure of reading the series is spotting how those chains cross.
Because the entries are short, the tone stays nimble. One prequel may read like a tragic confession. Another feels sly, funny, or openly creepy. Together they create the feeling of a haunted filing cabinet, where every drawer contains a new version of something you thought you knew. They also let Jace experiment more freely with voice, which helps the world feel crowded in a good way.
The stories are small. The mythology is not.
Readers who like lore heavy fantasy tend to get the most from this branch of the series. If you want the cleanest path through the main plot, you can read only the core novels. But if what you enjoy most is background, side characters, hidden motives, and the slow sense that every fairy tale person in the room is carrying a private disaster, the prequels are where the universe really opens up. They turn the main saga from one dark retelling into a whole shelf of overlapping confessions.
Edited by
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