Why did I love this book?
I picked up this deceptively slim book by chance and read it in a long afternoon.
It charts the collapse of Haile Selassie’s reign in Ethiopia in 1972 but resonates far beyond that moment. Told in the voices of the people who served him, it’s a compelling and darkly comic portrait of a regime whose dreams unmoored it from reality.
It would give Vladimir Putin a sleepless night, if he had a conscience.
2 authors picked The Emperor as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.
A "sensitive, powerful ... history" (The New York Review of Books) of a man living amidst nearly unimaginable pomp and luxury while his people teetered netween hunger and starvation.
Haile Selassie, King of Kings, Elect of God, Lion of Judah, His Most Puissant Majesty and Distinguished Highness the Emperor of Ethiopia, reigned from 1930 until he was overthrown by the army in 1974. While the fighting still raged, Ryszard Kapuscinski, Poland's leading foreign correspondent, traveled to Ethiopia to seek out and interview Selassie's servants and closest associates on how the Emperor had ruled and why he fell. This is Kapuscinski's…