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Tales of the Dervishes

Tales of the Dervishes
Tales of the Dervishes cover.jpg
Book cover of Tales of the Dervishes by Idries Shah
Author Idries Shah
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Genre Eastern philosophy and Sufism
Published October 2016
Publisher ISF Publishing
Publication date
1967-2016
Media type Print (Paperback & eBook).
Pages 248
ISBN
Preceded by The Exploits of the Incomparable Mulla Nasrudin

Tales of the Dervishes was first published in 1967, and recently re-published by The Idries Shah Foundation in October 2016. Together with The Exploits of Mulla Nasrudin, published the year before, it represented the first of several books of practical Sufi instructional materials to be released by Idries Shah. Like all releases on this new ISF Publishing era, this book (and its audiobook) is offered online, for free, on the official Idries Shah Foundation site.

Shortly before he died, Shah stated that his books form a complete course that could fulfil the function he had fulfilled while alive. As such, Tales of the Dervishes can be read as part of a whole course of study.

Tales of the Dervishes is a collection of stories, parables, legends and fables gathered from classical Sufi texts and oral sources spanning a period from the 7th to the 20th centuries. It introduced a 'genre' – the teaching story – to a contemporary readership familiar with the entertainment or moralistic values of such tales but unfamiliar with certain instrumental functions claimed for them. An author's postscript to each story offers a brief account of its provenance, use and place in Sufi tradition.

The Islamic scholar James Kritzeck, reviewing Shah's Tales of the Dervishes in The Nation, said that it was "beautifully translated" and equipped "men and women to make good use of their lives." The Stanford University professor Robert E. Ornstein, writing in Psychology Today, called the book "... a collection of diamonds ... incredibly well-crafted, multifaceted ... likely to endure in the manner of the Koran and the Bible."The Observer noted that the book "... challenges our intellectual assumptions at almost every point."Desmond Morris, in The World of Books (BBC), said that "For every decade we live, we will find another meaning in each story." The Sunday Times called it "An astonishingly generous and liberating book ... strikingly appropriate for our time and situation ... a jewel flung in the market-place."


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