Thread:DatAsymptote/@comment-5297572-20161008215325/@comment-3991308-20161009081828

it's up to your own discretion! here are our book guidelines

while I personally don't think it counts as a fairytale, due to its lack of fairytale elements, and while there is no overall plot to the series, there's nothing really stopping you? there's no specific time period (the England in Winnie the Pooh is still fairly similar to modern England, and the Hundred Acre Woods seems timeless) and there's nothing too complex about it? the only thing that might be hindering is the fact that Christopher Robin is a real person.

it would be interesting to see how you interpret winnie the pooh, though. are the events in the Hundred Acre Woods all part of Christopher Robin's and AA Milne's imagination? is Meleda a stuffed toy, like Edward Bear was? or is she purely a resident of the hundred acre wood, living under the same of Sanders. idk man, but i think the whole Winnie-the-Pooh series would be a cool concept to play around with since there's nothing really concrete about its universe.