A review by mburnamfink
Kalpa Imperial: The Greatest Empire That Never Was by Angélica Gorodischer

4.0

Kalpa Imperial is an imaginative work of fantasy from an Argentinian writer, translated into English by the Queen Herself, Ursula K. Le Guin. The stories are a multifaceted journey through the Eternal Imperium, a vast polity centered around a Golden Throne, and the succession of good and bad rulers. Each tale is told by a nameless storyteller, a popular historian.

The heart of the book is the chapter "Portrait of the Empress", which reveals how a girl who came from nothing claimed the imperial throne by truly thinking, seeing the world as it is, and not just gluing bits of others men thoughts together to make a world as we wish it to be, as most people live. That chapter is a shining gem, and many others have gorgeous dream like quality.

But the individual pieces don't quite cohere to the level of mythos, getting lost in a forest of symbols and signifiers. Maybe there's a thesis about history, power, domination, and the lure of the center in this book and I'm too inert to pick it up, or maybe it's just a metatextual game. Either way, this is very good and worth expanding my horizons for, but didn't quite hit home.