Strange Stories from a Chinese Studio (Volumes 1 and 2) by Songling Pu

(7 User reviews)   1118
By Elijah Zhou Posted on Feb 13, 2026
In Category - Ancient Legends
Pu, Songling, 1640-1715 Pu, Songling, 1640-1715
English
Okay, you know how I'm always complaining that fantasy feels too predictable? I just found the antidote. It's called 'Strange Stories from a Chinese Studio,' and it's a 17th-century collection that will completely mess with your head in the best way. Imagine walking through ancient China, where every shadow might be a fox spirit, every scholar might be visited by a ghost, and every object in your house could have a soul. There's no single 'main' plot—it's like a fever dream of short tales. The central mystery isn't a whodunit, but a 'what-is-real?' The book constantly asks: Is that beautiful woman a lost soul or a mischievous spirit? Is this dream a warning or a temptation? It’s eerie, funny, romantic, and sometimes terrifying, all at once. I stayed up way too late reading it, jumping from a story about a man who befriends a cricket to one where a painter brings his creations to life. If you want something truly different and mind-bending, grab this. It's old, but it feels fresher than half the stuff published last year.
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Let's clear something up first: this isn't a novel. Strange Stories from a Chinese Studio is a massive collection of nearly 500 very short tales, written by scholar Pu Songling over decades. He gathered folklore, rumors, and his own wild imagination into one place.

The Story

There is no single plot. Instead, you open a door to a world where the ordinary rules don't apply. A scholar falls in love with a woman who turns out to be a ghost. A kind man saves a fox, and the fox repays him with magical help for generations. A painter's drawings step off the page. A man discovers the market where dreams are bought and sold. Some stories are just a paragraph, a quick, chilling joke. Others are longer, twisting tales of revenge, loyalty, or cosmic justice. The 'studio' in the title is Pu's own mind—a place where the mundane and the supernatural constantly crash into each other.

Why You Should Read It

I loved this book because it feels so alive and surprising. Pu Songling wasn't just writing spooky stories; he was using ghosts and foxes to talk about real people. The tales poke fun at corrupt officials, celebrate cleverness, and explore deep questions about love and death. The spirits often have more honor than the humans! It's also incredibly imaginative. Just when you think you've seen it all, you'll read about a man who travels inside a painting or a city that exists inside a watermelon seed. It never gets boring. Reading a few stories before bed became my ritual—they're the perfect length for that.

Final Verdict

This is a perfect book for curious readers who love folklore, myth, or just a really good, weird story. If you're a fan of writers like Neil Gaiman or Kelly Link, you'll see their spiritual ancestors here. It's also great for people who like to dip in and out of a book, as each story stands alone. A word of advice: don't try to read it straight through like a novel. Savor it. Let a few tales sit with you. It's a window into a fascinating historical period, but more importantly, it's a collection of timeless, strange, and beautiful dreams put on paper.



ℹ️ Free to Use

This masterpiece is free from copyright limitations. You are welcome to share this with anyone.

George Anderson
1 year ago

If you enjoy this genre, the character development leaves a lasting impact. I couldn't put it down.

Joshua Taylor
1 year ago

A bit long but worth it.

5
5 out of 5 (7 User reviews )

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