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Fantasy anthologies

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Panchatantra
thumb|The first page of oldest surviving Panchatantra text in Sanskrit thumb|An 18th-century Pancatantra manuscript page in Braj ("The Talkative Turtle")
Hitopadeśa
thumb|upright=0.85|Nepalese manuscript of the Hitopadesha, c.1800
Baital Pachisi
collection of Indian tales
Śukasaptati
thumb|Prabhāvatī and the Parrot Śukasaptati, or Seventy tales of the parrot, is a collection of stories originally written in Sanskrit. The stories are supposed to be narrated to a woman by her pet parrot, at the rate of one story every night, in order to dissuade her from going out to meet her paramour when her husband is away. The stories frequently deal with illicit liaisons, the problems that flow from them and the way to escape those crises by using one's wits. Though the actual purpose of the parrot is to prevent its mistress from leaving, it does so without moralising. At the end of the
Tutinama
Tutinama (), literal meaning "Tales of a Parrot", is a 14th-century series of 52 stories in Persian. The work remains well-known largely because of a number of lavishly illustrated manuscripts, especially a version containing 250 miniature paintings commissioned by the Mughal Emperor Akbar in the 1550s. The Persian text used was edited in the 14th century from an earlier anthology 'Seventy Tales of the Parrot' in Sanskrit compiled under the title Śukasaptati (a part of katha literature) dated to the 12th century. In India, parrots (in light of their purported conversational abilities) are popu
Siṃhāsana Dvātriṃśikā
Indian collection of folk tales
Qissa-ye Chahar Darvesh
collection of allegorical stories by Amir Khusro written in Persian in the early 13th century
list of Panchatantra Stories
Wikimedia list article
Thakurmar Jhuli
Bengali fairytales
The Tolkien Reader
omnibus of several previously published books and works by J. R. R. Tolkien
Legends
anthology of fantasy novellas