In his Apocryphal Tales, Karel Čapek approaches major events and figures of history, myth, and literature in unexpected ways and from fresh points of view. These tales are apocryphal because they were, in effect, left out of the official stories that constitute our history and literature. In these tales, Čapek shared his wisdom most directly and enjoyably.
Some of the Apocryphal Tales: Jesus's loaves-and-fishes miracle is described from the point of view of an otherwise sympathetic baker. Townspeople argue about who's to blame for the approaching hordes of Attila the Hun, and end up hanging a refugee. Hamlet considers becoming an actor and playwright, Prometheus is tried for inventing fire, Pontius Pilate talks about what truth is, and Abraham and Sarah try to agree on the names of ten righteous people in Sodom. Abbots and smiths, servants and soldiers, judges and gods appear in these humorous, thought-provoking, and often frightening fablistic tales. Apocryphal Tales contains all new translations, as well as fables and "would-be tales" that had not yet appeared in English.