Resumen: Holocaust literature has often been described as producing disruption and estrangement. As the Holocaust challenges traditional forms of expression, writers have used alternative techniques, sometimes blurring genres and registers. This is the case with Holocaust narratives that rewrite fairy tales or use fairy-tale motifs and structures: they produce an estrangement effect in that their intertexts are defamiliarised as a strategy for opening up the possibilities of representation. This article focuses on three works of this kind, by authors Lisa Goldstein, Louise Murphy and Rachel Seiffert. Specifically, it considers how they constitute an alternative to the sanctioned metanarrative of the Holocaust, which is victim centred and facilitates the reader''s empathy. Indeed, the works discussed here complicate the categories of victim and perpetrator, thus problematising our engagement with the characters in a way that furthers the abovementioned estrangement effect. Attention is paid to the role played by secrecy in each narrative, as I contend that it is the secret and its effects in the diegesis that keep the characters at a distance, "estranged" from the reader. This distance precludes easy identification and invites critical discussion on the limitations of familiar categories and binaries, such as the victim/victimiser opposition and the public/secret dichotomy. Idioma: Inglés DOI: 10.28914/Atlantis-2020-42.1.03 Año: 2020 Publicado en: ATLANTIS-JOURNAL OF THE SPANISH ASSOCIATION OF ANGLO-AMERICAN STUDIES 42, 1 (2020), 37-56 ISSN: 0210-6124 Factor impacto JCR: 0.359 (2020) Categ. JCR: LINGUISTICS rank: 170 / 192 = 0.885 (2020) - Q4 - T3 Factor impacto SCIMAGO: 0.158 - Cultural Studies (Q1) - Literature and Literary Theory (Q1) - Linguistics and Language (Q1) - Language and Linguistics (Q1)