Good for you, abc! I will begin by saying that perhaps I only thought I had read this book back when we first started discussing it here but maybe in actuality I had only skimmed through it back in the sixties. (I might have been one of those people who saw the Kubric movie and then decided to read the book.) What got me interested this time was Nafisi's book,
Reading Lolita in Tehran. Of course I am at least forty years mature-er than I was back in the sixties, and this time when I read
Lolita it was literally a whole 'nother story to me.
Since
Lolita was named book of the month here (how many months ago?) I have happily acquired a whole new collection of Nabokoviana. First it was
The Annotated Lolita, then Pifer's
VN's Lolita, a Casebook, then I bought both of the movies on DVD (thereby developing a not-so-innocent crush on Jeremy Irons), not to mention the unabridged recorded book version read (oh, so beautifully) by the above named actor. Oh. and Stacey Schiff's biography of Nabokov's wife and "first reader",
Vera, a must-have if you want to know more about the man himself.
For me, Lolita has turned out to be a real-life love story (if it was not a true love that linked the two protagonists, then it is most certainly a true love that has developed between Nabokov and me.)
It seems to me that nobody else on earth writes quite like Nabokov wriote. And simply nothing he wrote was just like
Lolita. It is quite simply one of my all-time favorite books. I mean:
Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, exhibit number one is what the seraphs, the misinformed, simple, noble-winged seraphs, envied. Look at this tangle of thorns.