Las ciudades invisibles

print book, 105 pages

Spanish language

Published Nov. 10, 2008 by Crisálida Crasis.

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4 stars (9 reviews)

Las ciudades invisibles, publicado en 1972, es una serie de relatos de viajes que Marco Polo narra a Kublai Jan, emperador de los tártaros. Se lee como una novela, pero también como un ensayo y un largo poema sobre la condición humana.

Las ciudades que el viajero describe al lacónico emperador consciente de que su poder no trasciende en un planeta decrépito, reciben nombres de mujeres. Las mujeres, como las propias ciudades, enseñan lo externo y permiten al espectador, en la medida que les apetece, hurgar en su interior. Irene o Eusapia o Clarisa o Zenobia son arquitecturas imposibles y acaso, por la misma razón, como las mujeres, veraces.

En literatura, lo que no puede existir se puede ver. Ahí radica su grandeza. El que contempla no sólo es el Marco Polo resucitado a las letras del s. XX. Le acompaña el emperador que posee un atlas con las …

23 editions

Capsule descriptions of dozens of bizarre cities

5 stars

This little book takes the form of very short sections a page or two long describing either the frame story of a meeting between Kublai Khan and explorer Marco Polo who describes his travels through Central asia, or the fanciful cities he claims to have found there. These are titled with enigmatic tags such as "Cities and memory," "Cities and signs," "Thin cities," "Continuous cities" and the like. Each place is dominated by a single dream-like feature governing its citizens. Some come off as fantasy, others so dark as to constitute horror, while still others concern themselves with some odd philosophical point. There is no plot, not even in the frame story sections, no single theme, and the two named characters are given only the slightest of personal qualities. I would say that this is less a novel or series of short stories than a literary construction with fabulistic features. …

reviewed Invisible Cities by Italo Calvino (A Harvest/HBJ book)

One of the most magical books of all times

5 stars

This book is unlike almost any other book out there. A series of philosophical poetic vignettes that explore how people relate to the places around them, the time they move through, and each other, every one-page chapter is a poignant, self-contained thought. Sometimes wistful, sometimes funny, sometimes just downright weird. This is a must-read.