Born in St. Petersburg in 1899, Vladimir Nabokov was the eldest son
of an aristocratic and culturally educated family. Russian, French
and English were spoken in the Nabokov household and as a child,
Nabokov read authors such as Poe, Melville and Flaubert. Following
the Bolshevik revolution, the Nabokovs moved to London before
settling in Berlin. Nabokov stayed in England to study at Trinity
College Cambridge where he completed his studies. He was married to
his wife Vera in 1925. In the first twenty years of writing,
Nabokov's writings were in Russian and it was not until later that
his works were translated; many by his son Dimitri . In 1940 he
moved with his wife and son to America where he lectured at
Wellesley College from 1941 to 1948 before filling the post of
professor of Russian literature at Cornell until 1959. His first
novel written in English was The Real Life of Sebastian Knight
written in 1941. Nabokov is arguably most famous for his 1955 novel
Lolita. As well as writing novels, Nabokov wrote works of
non-fiction; notably on Nikolai Gogol (1944) and Eugene Onegin
(1964).
In an interview with Alfred Appel, Nabokov stated that 'the
writer's art is his real passport and not his nationality' and that
he was 'an American writer who has once been a Russian.' This
reflects Nabokov as a writer of great linguistic flexibility and
suggests that the early influence of foreign literature perpetuated
throughout his life, giving him the tools to portray ideas in
different languages. The ideas are the speakers in his work, not
the language. This ability to disorganise space is also reflected
in Nabokov's own compositional style where he purports in his early
years as a writer to have constructed paragraphs in his mind to be
re-written later and, later on in his career, to write sections on
note cards to be later re-arranged and re-written; the final work
appearing as a sequence of mental spaces materialised on paper.
Writers such as Martin Amis and Brian Boyd have positioned Nabokov
as one of the greatest writers of the century. Amis has commented
that 'to read him in full flight is to experience stimulation that
is at once intellectual, imaginative and aesthetic, the nearest
thing to pure sensual pleasure that prose can offer.'
'Vladimir Nabokov was a literary genius' David Lodge, Guardian
'Even first time readers cannot fail to appreciate Nobokov's
marvellous and distinctive way with words' David Lodge, Guardian
This unabridged edition of Nabokov's classic story about a middle-aged, expatriate European man's obsessive love for a 12-year-old girl‘which is being released to coincide with director Adrian Lyne's new film version‘is a beautifully produced recording that pushes the boundaries of the audio medium. While Lolita continues to raise the hackles of would-be censors even today, most listeners will marvel at the restraint and playful humor with which Nabokov limns his tale. Narrator Jeremy Irons, who plays Humbert Humbert in Lyne's film, is an uncompromising audiobook reader whose performances on cassette are as laudatory as his Academy AwardR-winning work on the silver screen. This landmark release is highly recommended for all library collections.‘Mark Annichiarico, "Library Journal"
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