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Stop Rewriting Old Books

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There’s a very specific kind of rage that comes from realizing a book you remembered vividly from your teenage years has secretly been replaced with a cleaner, shinier, emotionally diluted version of itself.

Like imagine reopening a scrapbook from high school only to discover someone went through it with beige paint and HR-approved dialogue.

That’s me right now with A Convenient Christmas Proposal by C.J. Carmichael.

And YES I know this is a dramatic reaction to a Harlequin romance novel from 2002 but if you grew up sneaking romances way too young you understand exactly why I’m acting like this is a cultural tragedy.

Because here’s the thing: the original version was MESSY.

Not “messy” in the cute TikTok “oops iced coffee spilled in my tote bag” way. I mean early-2000s paperback romance messy. Morally questionable. Slightly unhinged. The kind of plot where you pause every few chapters and whisper, “girl what is happening.”

The original story was about a female RCMP officer who shoots a man during a domestic violence situation. She’s suspended pending investigation. The dead man’s widow spirals into alcoholism and basically abandons the kids emotionally. The dead man’s brother — a journalist who already had tension with the cop before all this happened — steps in to help raise the children.

Then somehow, through grief, guilt, emotional repression, and the most aggressively early-2000s romantic tension imaginable, THEY GET MARRIED TO TAKE CARE OF THE KIDS.

Insane.

Absolutely insane.

And yet somehow it worked because the entire story revolved around this massive emotional weight hanging over everybody. The female lead literally killed the children’s father. Even if it was justified, that tension infected every interaction. The suspension mattered. The guilt mattered. The public scrutiny mattered.

It was dramatic and uncomfortable and weirdly compelling in the way old category romances sometimes were.

So tell me WHY I buy the newer edition and suddenly this woman didn’t even shoot him???

Now it takes place in Montana instead of Canada. She’s not RCMP anymore. Danny dies in a DUI crash after speeding away before she even pulls him over. She’s not suspended. She’s not publicly scrutinized. She’s basically just sad adjacent to the situation.

BABE THAT IS A DIFFERENT BOOK.

That is not a rewrite. That is witness protection for plotlines.

And the craziest part is I spent the ENTIRE first book in this series thinking maybe I was losing my mind because things felt… off. Too modern but weirdly trapped in early-2000s structure. Like everybody had contemporary sensitivities but was still speaking in Harlequin dialogue.

I literally thought I was just being dramatic.

Hector was like, “Maybe you just remembered it differently.”

NO.

IT WAS REWRITTEN IN 2020.

WHICH EXPLAINS EVERYTHING.

Because of course in 2020 publishers were not about to rerelease a romance where the heroine is a cop who kills a man during a domestic violence incident and then falls in love with his brother while helping raise the kids. That premise suddenly became radioactive.

And listen, I get why publishers modernize things. I understand wanting stories to feel accessible to current readers. But at some point you stop updating language and start removing the literal spine of the story.

The original book was ABOUT guilt.

The rewrite is about unfortunate circumstances.

Those are not emotionally equivalent.

It honestly reminds me of movie adaptations that keep maybe three character names and a vague outline but remove the entire thing people actually connected to. Like Mickey 17. Same aesthetic. Same branding. Completely different emotional DNA from the book Mickey 7!

And maybe this is controversial but I genuinely do not think older books should be heavily rewritten and rereleased like this.

Put a disclaimer in the front. Add context. Release an updated edition separately if you want. But don’t quietly replace the original story with a sanitized version and act like they’re interchangeable.

Because fiction SHOULD reflect the time period it came from.

Even when it’s weird.

Even when it’s uncomfortable.

Even when a 2002 Harlequin romance makes you stare at the wall for twenty minutes wondering why the solution to trauma was apparently “surprise marriage.”

That’s part of the charm.

Older books are little time capsules. You can feel the era in them — the fears, the tropes, the moral blind spots, the chaos. And once you start sanding all that down to fit modern standards, you lose the thing that made them interesting in the first place.

Sometimes I WANT the weird version.

Sometimes I WANT the emotionally questionable plotline.

Sometimes I want books to feel like they were written by women drinking coffee at midnight in 2002 while watching Law & Order reruns and chain-smoking emotional damage into a manuscript.

And honestly? Let old books be old books.

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