That dread question “What’s it about?”
And that has a bit of truth to it. It’s about all cities, really, and I often felt as though it was about all times as well – or at least a great many. The book is a series of word-sketches of cities, framed within conversations between Kublai Khan and Marco Polo about the state of the Khan’s empire and about cities in a more general sense. It’s about imagination, reality, perceptions.nvisible Cities is a collection of very short stories between one and three pages long. These stories are about strange cities around the world. Some are cities with the ground in the sky, some are cities of strange people or religions. We find in these conversations that Marco Polo is the one telling the aging Kublai Khan about these outrageous cities. And by the end, we find that Marco Polo’s many cities seem to merge together. Was he really describing just one city? Is he describing cities at all?
The body of each chapter contains a series of short sketches, related by Marco Polo, each describing a ‘city.’ Each city description is categorised by the variety of city (Thin Cities, Cities & the Dead, Cities & the Sky etc.) The categories are dispersed randomly through each of the nine chapters, and the examples within each category are numbered.
Calvino, then, in describing (possibly) one city in so many different ways, brings that city to life in many different ways. Yet, my ear strained to get the meanings out of this book. If it is the ear that commands the story, my ears failed me. But I sense a deep purpose and philosophical meaning behind it all.


