Kalpa imperial

155 pages

Spanish language

Published Dec. 3, 1983 by Minotauro.

ISBN:
978-950-547-012-9
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OCLC Number:
10823326

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4 stars (10 reviews)

Kalpa imperial reúne once relatos, once fragmentos de la historia del Imperio Más Vasto que Nunca Existió. Por el narrador sabemos que el Imperio fue destruido y reconstruido infinidad de veces y que su historia vuelve a empezar con cada nueva dinastía de emperadores y emperatrices. El escenario es siempre el mismo: el montañoso norte, el sur selvático y las ciudades capitales. Las historias son múltiples y diversas. Como la de Bib, el chico esmirriado que pretende refundar el Imperio e inventar un nuevo orden; la del último príncipe de la dinastía de los Orioles y su extraña muerte; la de la huérfana que asciende desde los bajos fondos hasta el trono; la del Emperador Cuarto en las dinastía de los Kiautonor, que manda a construir una ciudad en honor de su amante. Angélica Gorodischer crea un universo ficcional portentoso, absolutamente propio, donde la distopía se cruza con el realismo, …

11 editions

Feel that I should've liked this more than I did

No rating

Some books that you stumble upon ends up punching you in the guts, others do not. This book was of the latter category, but I still think it should've been the former, much so based on that I like the works of the translator, Ursula K. LeGuin.

As a part of my job I support unemployed persons that have internships at my organization, among them at a few of the charity shops that we run. It was while browsing the bookshelves during a slow hour that I came upon Kalpa imperial. It seemed like my kind of book, and I still think it is.

I think I understand what the author wanted to do, and I think it is clever. She sketches the history of an empire, follows its many rulers , their surge, their downfall, internal and external strife; and how the empire and its society adapts during …

Short stories of a fictional empire and the oral storyteller that connects them

5 stars

A collection of connected short stories set in a fictional [possibly post-apocolyptic] empire about its many rulers and cities and across many years. The stories are short and leave you wanting to know more about the people in them.

The writing is tight with just enough description to convince you they're being told by an oral storyteller, but it's not flowery and at times you wish you could hear a little bit more description.

However, one failing is how the stories connect. Other than the oral storyteller and the empire they pertain to, one is left wondering what connects them together. What are the relationships between all the emperors and empresses? Unfortunately, I suspect that would require a fictional history lesson and a long kings list, which would most certainly distract from the stories themselves.

Review of 'Kalpa imperial' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

This was a very interesting book. It's set up as a series of loosely connected stories, and told in a sort of Arabian Nights style. It does give the feeling that there is a whole history, basically an endless history of the empire, and these stories are just these little fragments peeking through. But they're very rich fragments.

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