The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night — Volume 04 (of 10) by Burton

(6 User reviews)   1131
By Caleb Zhao Posted on Apr 1, 2026
In Category - Photography
English
Okay, so you think you know the Arabian Nights? Think again. This isn't the cleaned-up, kid-friendly Aladdin you grew up with. This is Volume 4 of Sir Richard Burton's legendary translation, and it's the real, uncut, and absolutely wild deal. We're talking about a world where stories are weapons, where a single tale can save your life or condemn you. The main thread here is still Scheherazade, spinning story after story to stop a murderous king from killing her at dawn. But inside that frame, we get some of the most bizarre and brilliant nested stories yet—magic lamps, talking birds, cunning thieves, and lovers separated by impossible distances. The real mystery isn't just 'what happens next?' It's 'how on earth is she going to top *this* one?' It's addictive, surprising, and sometimes shockingly adult. If you want to read the stories that inspired centuries of fantasy, this is where you start. Just be prepared for a few raised eyebrows.
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Let's set the scene. King Shahryar, betrayed, has a nasty habit of marrying a new woman each night and having her executed the next morning. Enter Scheherazade, his latest bride, who has a plan: she starts telling him a story, but leaves it on a cliffhanger at daybreak. To hear the end, the king has to let her live another day. And so it goes, night after night, story within story within story.

The Story

This volume is a chunk of that marathon storytelling session. It's not one plot, but a cascade of them. You might follow a poor fisherman who pulls up a sealed jar containing a vengeful genie, only to have to outwit it with his own clever story. Then, within that tale, a character might start telling another story about a magical city or a prince turned to stone. The frame of Scheherazade's life-or-death situation ties together these wildly different adventures—romances, comedies, morality tales, and flat-out weird fantasies. It’s a literary nesting doll where every layer reveals something new and unexpected.

Why You Should Read It

First, Burton's translation is an event in itself. It's not sterile or modernized. It's dense, poetic, and packed with footnotes explaining the customs, jokes, and racy bits that other translators left out. You get the full cultural package. Second, the sheer inventiveness is staggering. These stories are the DNA of modern fantasy and adventure fiction. Reading them, you constantly have the thrilling sense of discovering the original source of a trope you’ve seen a hundred times. Yes, some parts feel repetitive, and the pacing is from another century, but that's part of the charm. You're not binge-watching a show; you're sitting at the foot of a master storyteller, getting lost in a world that feels vast and endlessly surprising.

Final Verdict

This is for the curious reader, the myth-lover, and anyone tired of predictable plots. It's perfect for fantasy fans who want to see where it all began, for history nerds who appreciate Burton's obsessive notes, and for anyone who just loves a good, old-fashioned yarn. It's not a quick read—it's a book to savor, to dip in and out of. If you can embrace its rhythms and its occasionally shocking content, you'll find one of the most influential and entertaining story collections ever put to paper. Just maybe don't read it to your kids at bedtime.



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Ashley Thomas
4 months ago

Beautifully written.

Brian Brown
1 year ago

Used this for my thesis, incredibly useful.

Dorothy Flores
1 year ago

Surprisingly enough, the clarity of the writing makes this accessible. Exactly what I needed.

Michelle Lee
11 months ago

A must-have for anyone studying this subject.

Oliver King
1 year ago

Solid story.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (6 User reviews )

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