Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Noah Kumin's avatar

Yeah Ada is worth reading if for nothing else than for being the apogee of Nabokov's Nabokovness. Also the late chapter on the nature of time is extraordinary.

Expand full comment
Kevin LaTorre's avatar

Literary history, literary personalities, literary criticism: you've melded them all here and somehow it makes inevitable sense that you should have. Well done! (I read a very unfortunate pseudo-manifesto for "Universality and Prose" from a Substack alt-lit novelist which never once mentioned the greatness of character in railing against auto-fiction. I read that essay three times in disbelief before deciding that any combat-by-comment wouldn't be worthwhile).

I'll confess my own very soft spot for Nabokov, which is like my soft spot for Franz Liszt (pray this analogy lands): I admire the technical brilliance and the sense of play, the virtuosity as the ultimate point of the playing. But when I want to hum along or tap my foot or sing it to myself later, I go for Tchaikovsky or B.B. King or the Arctic Monkeys or Ella Fitzgerald or Elvis Presley. The former is akin to Nabokov; the latter, Dostoevsky, Joyce, Faulkner, all the rest of the novelists whom the arch-aristocrat Sirin dismissed. And yet, I feel I need all of them as styles and visions to plunder as I need. They were personally and aesthetically opposed to each other, but they don't feel in opposition to me as a reader: they look like a banquet spread.

Expand full comment
3 more comments...

No posts