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Strange Stories from a Chinese Studio, Volume 2

"Strange Tales from a Chinese Studio" or "Strange Tales of Liaozhai" is a collection of nearly five hundred mostly supernatural tales written by Pu Songling during the early Qing Dynasty. It was written in Classical Chinese rather than Vernacular Chinese. Pu is believed to have completed the majority of the tales sometime in 1679, though he could have added entries as late as 1707. He borrows from a folk tradition of oral storytelling to put to paper a series of captivating, colorful stories, where the boundary between reality and the odd or fantastic is blurred. The cast of characters includes vixen spirits, ghosts, scholars, court officials, Taoist exorcists and beasts. Moral purposes are often inverted between humans and the supposedly degenerate ghosts or spirits, resulting in a satirical edge to some of the stories. Ghosts and spirits are often bold and trustworthy, while humans are on the other hand weak, indecisive and easily manipulated, reflecting the author's own disillusionment with his society. ( Wikipedia) (9 hr 50 min)

Chapters

63 - The Lo-Ch‘a Country and the Sea-market

64 - The Fighting Cricket

65 - Taking Revenge

66 - The Tipsy Turtle

67 - The Magic Path

68 - The Faithless Widow

69 - Princess of the Tung-t‘ing Lake

70 - The Princess Lily

71 - The Donkey’s Revenge

72 - The Wolf Dream

73 - The Unjust Sentence

74 - A Chinese Rip van Winkle

75 - The Three States of Existence

76 - In the Infernal Regions

77 - Singular case of Ophthalmia

78 - Chou K‘o-ch‘ang and his Ghost

79 - The Spirits of the Po-yang Lake

80 - The Stream of Cash

81 - The Injustice of Heaven

82 - The Sea-serpent

83 - The Magic Mirror

84 - Courage Tested

85 - The Disembodied Friend

86 - The Cloth Merchant

87 - A Strange Companion

88 - Spiritualistic Séances

89 - The Mysterious Head

90 - The Spirit of the Hills

91 - Ingratitude Punished

92 - Smelling Essays

93 - His Father’s Ghost

94 - The Boat-girl Bride

95 - The Two Brides

96 - A Supernatural Wife

97 - Bribery and Corruption

98 - A Chinese Jonah

99 - Chang Pu-liang

100 - The Dutch Carpet

101 - Carrying a Corpse

102 - A Taoist Devotee

103 - Justice for Rebels

104 - Theft of the Peach

105 - Killing a Serpent

106 - The Resuscitated Corpse

107 - The Fisherman and his Friend

108 - The Priest’s Warning

109 - Metempsychosis

110 - The Forty Strings of Cash

111 - Saving Life

112 - The Salt Smuggler

113 - Collecting Subscriptions

114 - Taoist Miracles

115 - Arrival of Buddhist Priests

116 - The Stolen Eyes

117 - The Invisible Priest

118 - The Censor in Purgatory

119 - Mr. Willow and the Locusts

120 - Mr. Tung; or, Virtue Rewarded

121 - The Dead Priest

122 - The Flying Cow

123 - The ''Mirror and Listen'' Trick

124 - The Cattle Plague

125 - The Marriage of the Virgin Goddess

126 - The Wine Insect

127 - The Faithful Dog

128 - An Earthquake

129 - Making Animals

130 - Cruelty Avenged

131 - The Wei-ch‘i Devil

132 - The Fortune-hunter Punished

133 - Life Prolonged

134 - The Clay Image

135 - Dishonesty Punished

136 - The Mad Priest

137 - Feasting the Ruler of Purgatory

138 - The Picture Horse

139 - The Butterfly’s Revenge

140 - The Doctor

141 - Snow in Summer

142 - Planchette

143 - Friendship with Foxes

144 - The Great Rat

145 - Wolves

146 - Singular Verdict

147 - The Grateful Dog

148 - The Great Test

149 - The Alchemist

150 - Raising the Dead

151 - Fêng-shui

152 - The Lingering Death

153 - Dreaming Honours

154 - The She-wolf and the Herd-boys

155 - Adulteration Punished

156 - A Chinese Solomon

157 - The Roc

158 - The Faithful Gander

159 - The Elephants and the Lion

160 - The Hidden Treasure

161 - The Boatmen of Lao-lung

162 - The Pious Surgeon

163 - Another Solomon

164 - The Incorrupt Official

Appendix A Part I - Taoist Temples

Appendix A Part II - The Ten Courts of Justice