<P> Many of the short stories and poems (as well as many older texts) are collected in The Trials and Tribulations of Little Red Riding Hood by Jack Zipes . </P> <Ul> <Li> Wolf by Gillian Cross (1990), winner of the 1991 Carnegie Medal . This is a very loose adaptation of the tale set in the modern day . </Li> <Li> Caperucita en Manhattan by Carmen Martín Gaite (1990). </Li> <Li> Witches Abroad by Terry Pratchett (1991) parodies a number of fairy tales, including Little Red Riding Hood . In this version Granny Weatherwax and Nanny Ogg stop the wolf before it has a chance to eat the grandmother (much to its own relief, as it's acting against its will). Nanny Ogg remembers hearing about the same thing happening a couple of villages away, when she was a girl . She also refers obliquely to an incident when she visited her grandmother in a red hood, involving "Sumpkins the lodger". </Li> <Li> Little Red Riding Hood in the Red Light District by Manlio Argueta (1998). </Li> <Li> Darkest Desire: The Wolf's Own Tale by Anthony Schmitz (1998). </Li> <Li> Low Red Moon by Caitlín R. Kiernan (2003). </Li> <Li> Little Red Riding Wolf (Seriously Silly Stories) (2004), a children's novel by Laurence Anholt and Arthur Robins, in which the roles of the main characters are reversed, so that the' Big Bad Girl' terrorises the innocent hero, Little Red Riding Wolf, before meeting her come - uppance from the terrifying Old Granny Wolf . </Li> <Li> The Book of Lost Things by John Connolly (2006). </Li> <Li> The Sisters Grimm series, in which Red Riding Hood is said to have gone insane after her encounter with the wolf . </Li> <Li> Red Rider's Hood (2006) by Neal Shusterman . </Li> <Li> Sisters Red (2010) by Jackson Pearce . </Li> <Li> Red Hood's Revenge (2010) by Jim C. Hines The third book in Hines' Princess series - starring Danielle Whiteshore (Cinderella), Talia Malak - el - Dahshat (Sleeping Beauty), and Snow White as a trio of' secret agents' for Danielle's mother - in - law -, Roudette has become an assassin known as the Lady of the Red Hood, after her family were killed by the Wild Hunt, a group of monstrous spirits who kill anyone in their path; the wolf in her story was actually her grandmother wearing an enchanted wolf - skin when she was killed by the Hunt for her long vendetta against them . After her grandmother's death, Roudette took the skin and combined it with her pre-existing red cloak; initially enchanted to block magic, Roudette had the runes changed so that they deflect fairy magic, the combination of the two cloaks making Roudette immune to magic cast on her directly and able to transform into a wolf . She is killed at the conclusion of the novel after defeating the Wild Hunt, with her cloak being subsequently claimed by her former rival Talia (AKA Sleeping Beauty). </Li> <Li> Dust City (2010) by Robert Paul Weston . Deals more with the wolf . </Li> <Li> Glasgow Fairytale (2010) by Alastair D McIver is based on intertwined versions of traditional fairy tales set in and around modern day Glasgow, including the story of Wee Red Hoodie and the Big Bad Wolf . </Li> <Li> Red Riding Hood (2011) by Sarah Blakley - Cartwright </Li> <Li> The Red Hood, Black Hood Trilogy" (2012) by Kenneth W. Hether An upcoming adult - contemporary urban fantasy serial - novel series . In which Little Red Riding Hood is executed to awaken the powers of her fabled cloak, which is to be worn by a Grim - Reaper called "The Red Reaper". </Li> <Li> Scarlet (2013) by Marissa Meyer . The second book in The Lunar Chronicles, a series of interconnected fairy - tale retellings in a gritty futuristic setting . </Li> </Ul> <Li> Wolf by Gillian Cross (1990), winner of the 1991 Carnegie Medal . This is a very loose adaptation of the tale set in the modern day . </Li> <Li> Caperucita en Manhattan by Carmen Martín Gaite (1990). </Li>

Who followed little red riding hood in jungle