Ali Baba, or the Forty Thieves by Unknown
Let's talk about a story everyone thinks they know. 'Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves' is one of those tales that's been told and retold so many times, the original edges have been smoothed off. Picking up this version is like discovering the blueprint for all those adaptations.
The Story
Ali Baba is just a regular guy, a poor woodcutter trying to get by. One day, he hides in a tree and watches a band of thieves approach a rock. Their leader says 'Open, Sesame!' and a hidden door appears. After they leave, Ali Baba tries the magic words himself and finds a cave stuffed with gold, jewels, and silks. He takes a little to help his family, but his rich, greedy brother Cassim finds out. Cassim goes to the cave, but in his panic, he forgets the magic words and gets trapped. The thieves find and kill him.
When the thieves realize someone else knows their secret, they come looking. This is where the story gets really good. The hero isn't Ali Baba—it's his brother's clever slave, Morgiana. She's the one who figures out the thieves are marking the house, outsmarts their leader when he comes disguised as an oil merchant, and ultimately saves the day with quick thinking and a very sharp knife.
Why You Should Read It
This isn't just a simple fairy tale. It's a surprisingly tight story about class, intelligence, and justice. Ali Baba stumbles into his fortune through pure luck, but it's Morgiana's sharp mind that actually preserves it. She's a servant, a woman with no power in that society, yet she's the most capable person in the whole story. The thieves are genuinely scary, and the stakes feel real. There's a constant, quiet tension as they hunt for the man who found their loot. It makes you think about who the real 'thieves' are in a world of haves and have-nots.
Final Verdict
This is for anyone who loves a classic adventure but wants one with teeth. It's perfect for readers who enjoy clever protagonists, tight plotting, and stories where brains beat brute force every time. If you only know Ali Baba from cartoons, this original will be a brilliant, quick surprise. It proves that the oldest stories often have the most bite.
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Jackson Clark
10 months agoGreat read!
William Hill
1 year agoWow.
Robert Lewis
1 year agoVery helpful, thanks.
Logan Johnson
10 months agoThanks for the recommendation.
Thomas Thomas
1 year agoI came across this while browsing and the clarity of the writing makes this accessible. Worth every second.