Set in rural Värmland, The Emperor of Portugallia follows Jan of Skrolycka, a humble crofter whose consuming love for his daughter, Klara Gulla, becomes a salvational fantasy when poverty drives her to the city. Imagining himself sovereign of the invented realm "Portugallia," Jan fashions a dignifying counter-world against communal scorn. Lagerlöf's narration blends ballad cadence and folkloric sign with unsparing social realism, yielding a luminous study of madness, devotion, and the fragile economies of honor in nineteenth-century Sweden. Born in Värmland and laureled with the 1909 Nobel Prize, Selma Lagerlöf drew on the oral storytelling of Mårbacka and her training as a schoolteacher to braid parable with psychology. Witness to rural dispossession and early industrial migration, she turned regional memory into ethical narrative; the novel's scrutiny of parental love and social stigma echoes the compassion animating Gösta Berling's Saga and Nils Holgersson. Readers of psychologically acute, folklore-inflected fiction will find this novel both unsettling and consoling. In lucid, musical prose it probes dignity, poverty, and modernization's costs, rewarding scholars, book clubs, and anyone drawn to the intersection of myth, community, and moral imagination. Quickie Classics summarizes timeless works with precision, preserving the author's voice and keeping the prose clear, fast, and readable-distilled, never diluted. Enriched Edition extras: Introduction · Synopsis · Historical Context · Author Biography · Brief Analysis · 4 Reflection Q&As · Editorial Footnotes.
Autorentext
Selma Lagerlöf (1858-1940) was a Swedish author and teacher. She published her first novel, Gösta Berling's Saga, at the age of 33. She was the first female writer to win the Nobel Prize in Literature, which she was awarded in 1909.