The popularity of the Chinese storyteller goes back to the marketplace
of the T'ang dynasty, but the familiar figure came into its own in the
twelfth and thirteenth centuries. This selection of stories from Feng
Menglong's collection, Stories Old and New (originally published in
1624), includes representative types of the storyteller's traditional
art. "The Pearl-Sewn Shirt" is a cautionary romance describing the
tragedy of a broken marriage; the heroic biography, which depicts a
neglected man of high worth gradually receiving recognition, is
represented by "Wine and Dumplings"; an authentic twelfth-century
forerunner of the detective story is found in "The Canary Murders." The
other tales concern traffic in the supernatural, didactic admonitions to
observe morality in sex and loyalty in friendship, and realistic
accounts of the meanness and corruption of official life. Also includes
"The Lady Who Was a Beggar," "The Journey of the Corpse," "The Story of
Wu Pao-an," and "The Fairy's Rescue."