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Many other works provide material or important information. Biographies of Galland (all, alas, in French) and other translators such as Richard Francis Burton and John Payne contain information on how their translations came to be made, while quarrying among some of the textural studies of the
Nights
can provide valuable and unexpected insights. Both Peter L. Carracciolo's (ed.)
The Arabian
Nights in English Literature
(1988) and Daniel Beaumont's
Slave of Desire: Sex, Love, and Death in The 1001 Nights
(2002) contain fine introductions on the
Nights
and its history along with their respective titular thematic concerns, while Eva Sallis's
Scheherazade Through the Looking Glass
(1999) examines the concept of changefulness as it applies to the
Nights
' history and cultural perspective in both the Middle East and the West. A more recent work,
The Arabian Nights Reader
(ed. Ulrich Marzolph), is a collection of essays examining various aspects of the work, and is also very worthwhile.

The problem with recommending actual editions of the
Nights
is exactly the reverse: there aren't too few; there are too many. In English, the Richard Burton edition remained the longest and most famous unexpurgated version for 120 years until Malcolm Lyons's marvellous new translation appeared to acclaim in 2008. Burton remains valuable, but be warned: the great explorer's eccentric style and Victorian prejudices take some getting use to. That said, he captures the earthy romance of the
Nights
as perhaps no other English writer has before or since. The John Payne version that preceded Burton's is written in a more graceful style, and Payne has an ear for poetry that Burton frankly doesn't possess, but for all that it lacks the bawdy virility of “Ruffian Dick” Burton's
Arabian Nights
. If Burton proves too much, the reader can do no better in English than Malcolm Lyons.

One of the most readable abridged editions to appear in English is N.J. Dawood's
Tales from the Thousand and One Nights
. Dawood, most famous for his English translation of the
Koran
, cleverly alternates short and long stories. His edition, first published by Penguin Books in 1954 as-—playfully—number 1001 in their catalogue, has seen at least twenty editions and is perhaps the easiest-to-digest English version of a selection of
Nights
stories for general readers. Of contemporary works, Husain Haddawy's English translation of Mahdi's
Alf Laila wa Laila
is graceful and
pleasingly accurate; his sequel of orphan stories,
Arabian Nights II
, is also eminently worthwhile.

Films to See

As stated earlier, most “Arabian Nights” films are barely worth viewers' time and trouble, unless they're looking for camp. But as with books on the
Nights
, there are a handful of motion pictures that stand out as intelligent or charming renditions of actual stories or tales inspired by the work. All are available in various video formats.

Lotte Reiniger's 1926
Adventures of Prince Achmed
is for both animation buffs as well as
Arabian Nights
' aficionados, and after some eighty-plus years still astounds by its technique of moving silhouette cut-outs. Both the Douglas Fairbanks silent
The Thief of Bagdad
and the 1940 Alexander Korda remake can be recommended to children and adults alike, and despite the genie-like advances in special effects since their respective releases, both versions retain a charm and magic lacking in many of today's fantasy films. On the other hand, Pier Paolo Pasolini's
Flower of the Arabian Nights
(a.k.a.
Arabian Nights
) can definitely not be recommended to children or sensitive adults, but all others are likely to be mesmerized by the great director's evocation of the dreamy, erotic qualities found in the original
Alf Laila wa Laila
. Difficult to find in an unedited version, it is still well worth the discriminating cineaste's effort.

I must confess to one guilty pleasure.
The Golden Voyage of Sinbad
[
sic
] (1974) remains among the juvenile sub-
Nights
genre of the Sindbad adventure film, but with a fine score by Miklos Roza, brilliant stop-motion effects by the legendary Ray Harryhausen and plenty of action and romance, it sneaks into the viewer's affections quite effectively. As an added bonus, it is also one of the few
Nights
films—and the only Sindbad picture—where the lead actor (John Philip Law) actually bothers speaking with an Arabian accent.

Websites

The emergence of the wired world has transformed the modern age of information almost beyond recognition. If general books on the
Nights
for mainstream readers are as rare as roc's eggs, the internet boasts a number of sites devoted either entirely or partly to the work, although the open nature of the web and the lack of vetting makes it hard to differentiate among levels of accuracy. For those wanting to read the various “adult” versions of the
Nights
in English, the Arabian Nights Project at
www.wollamshram.ca/1001/index.htm
offers not only the complete text to Sir Richard Burton's entire sixteen volumes but also the whole of the John Payne translation, including Payne's supplementary stories, and even the Jonathan Scott and Andrew Lang abridged editions. Wikipedia has a long-standing and quite fine article on the
Nights
, while Michael Lundell's blog at
http://journalofthenights.blogspot.com
is at once informative and wide-ranging. These sites deserve unqualified support and frequent visitation from anyone with even the slightest interest in this lovely, fascinating book.

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