The Oceans of Cruelty

Twenty-Five Tales of a Corpse-Spirit
A Retelling by Douglas J. Penick

Penick Writes: When I told Larry Mermelstein that this was happening, he looked at me with surprise and said that the Vidyadhara had always wanted someone to translate this material.

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From New York Review Books:

One of the oldest books in the world, The Oceans of Cruelty is a sequence of twenty-five tales from India whose central theme is the dark power of storytelling. At the start, a young king falls into the hands of a wicked sorcerer, who orders him to find a vetala, or corpse spirit, to serve him; the young king must do as he is told, and soon enough he is also under the sway of the no less malevolent spirit. Like a bat, the spirit hangs from the branches of a tree, and the king is condemned to bear it on his back through a dark forest as it whispers a riddling story in his ear. These are tales of suicidal passion, clever deceit, patriarchal oppression, and narrow escapes from death, and as long as the king can resolve the problems they pose, his bondage continues; the vampiric creature goes on commanding his attention in the dark. Only when the king is out of answers will he at last be free, though when that comes to pass—well, that’s when the whole story takes a new turn. –New York Review Books

Join Trycicle on October 30 at 2 P.M. ET for a conversation with writer Douglas J. Penick and Tricycle’s editor-in-chief, James Shaheen, on Penick’s new book, The Oceans of Cruelty: Twenty-Five Tales of a Corpse Spirit.

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