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Vladimir Nabokov: Look at the Harlequins!

Peder said:
SIL,
I have never seen a similar group for Nabokov. Although there are at least two collections of real and genuine Nabokov scholars, I don't know that they or any other groups engage in light-hearted fripperies.
So whenever there is a knotty question of fact here in our own Nabokovia, I whimsically engage Holmes's fictional crew (when they are free.) They are a very colorful bunch. :rolleyes:

Peder

Aha! And so, my dear Peder, am I to assume that you (and you alone) are the VN/BSI incarnate? Fripperies and color and all?
 
pontalba said:
ROTFALOLTIC! :cool:

Peder
How do you like James Patterson?
I really like Alex Cross the person. He has a nice family and personal life in addition to his professional side. I've read most of his books.
Peder
 
Peder said:
The Man in the High Castle - P.K. Dick
Blade Runner - P.K.Dick
Red Mars - Kim Stanley Robinson (plus Green and Blue to go)
The Book of Spies - Alan Furst (Editor)
Suite Francaise - Irene Nemirovsky
New York Trilogy - Paul Auster
I Know This Much is True - Wally Lamb
The Orientalist - Tom Reiss
Wedding in December.
Peder
I have the ones above too, plus a couple of others by Kim Stanley Robinson, The Gold Coast, The three Californias, oh! Thats all by him.
But I do have a couple by Scott Turow, including the new one Ordinary Heros. I really look forward to that one. Someday. :D
Oh, also five others by Allen Furst, he is quite interesting.
 
StillILearn said:
We have to stop meeting this way, pontalba. :D


...........................

I totally disagree! :D In fact exactly the opposite! LOL We must keep meeting like this! :cool:
 
StillILearn said:
Aha! And so, my dear Peder, am I to assume that you (and you alone) are the VN/BSI incarnate? Fripperies and color and all?
Well, noo, SIL,
My own suspicion is that it is our own pontalba who is the actual secret Head of the VN/BSI, because she always comes up with the answers before any of them do. :rolleyes:
Peder
 
Peder said:
Well, noo, SIL,
My own suspicion is that it is our own pontalba who is the actual secret Head of the VN/BSI, because she always comes up with the answers before any of them do. :rolleyes:
Peder
Shhhhhhh!! Don't blow my cover, which is a cover for the Real Secret Person in Charge of the VN/BSI.....:p
 
pontalba said:
But I do have a couple by Scott Turow, including the new one Ordinary Heros. I really look forward to that one. Someday. :D
Oh, also five others by Allen Furst, he is quite interesting.
I feel my pile growing by the minute, the longer I stay on-line here. :eek:
But good. But good. :D
 
pontalba said:
Steffee....hey Steff, ya out there...:D
Sorry! I am reading this thread though, eventually. :)

And I have started it, at least, now. :D

It looks like this one is another of Nabokov's twisty books. All the references to his other works is so entertaining to keep up with. Some are inversions, some are straight on.....vintage VN! ;)
Vintage VN? TOES! :D
 
Hey there Steffee!
Come on in the water is sooo fine! Harlequins! is a hoot to read, both because of all the aforementioned references to other Nabokovs, plus the prose, plus the ever mysterious "You".
Seriously...........TOES!

SIL Do you know who "You" is yet? There is a tie-in with another of Nabokov's books. But my lip is zipped.
for the moment. :D
 
SIL,
Help!
I can't place that reference to the train running in a circle -- lost as usual. :(
So what page are you on? :confused:
Peder
 
Peder said:
SIL,
Help!
I can't place that reference to the train running in a circle -- lost as usual. :(
So what page are you on? :confused:
Peder

That wuzz .. p.70

Don't know who you is yet but you can bet I'll be keeping an eye out.
 
StillILearn said:
That wuzz .. p.70

Don't know who you is yet but you can bet I'll be keeping an eye out.
Ah! Thanks SIL,
With you now!
P. 69. sure gave me a sinking feeling with that line:
She had less than fifteen minutes of life left.
And Iris seemed so promising for a happy life for him! I liked Iris.

But it is also the first place I had a chance to check something which I remember reading -- in the usual vague "someplace" -- that the appearance of a butterfly in Nabokov's novels often signifies the impending arrival of Death. And sure enough, there on p.67
I remember more clearly a glazed case hanging on the gold-figured wall next to our table: it displayed four Morpho butterflies, two huge ones similar in harsh sheen but differently shaped, and two smaller ones beneath them, the left of a sweeter blue with white stripes and the right gleaming like silvery satin.
Not only that, but Ivor next immediately asks after the health of Mata Hari, the ara, as Nabokov underlines the theme.
And then, as if that were not still enough, on p.68, Ivor is commenting on a script and saying "You will die!" for a triple underline by Nabokov.
And so it happens.

Much later in the book I also got a very bad feeling, as I began to sense Nabokov's ways of handling events, and said "Oh, no" to myself with a wince, as something inevitable seemed about to happen. There are a lot of people who fall out of the action in one way or another in this novel. But Iris was really too bad.

Anyway "you" is far in your future and you'll notice it for sure.
And if you are counting wives, it is now one down and only a few to go. :D

Peder
 
StillILearn said:
That wuzz .. p.70

Don't know who you is yet but you can bet I'll be keeping an eye out.
Drat! Thanks SIL, I searched and could not find it fer nuttin! :eek:

I will say that you are not that far off from the first mention of "You". ;)
 
StillILearn said:
you



..........................
Double :eek: :eek: SIL!
Marvelous!!
Thanks for posting that link.

Yes, the resemblance is remarkable.
But I have to say the son is better looking than his father....:)
 
Ooops. Perhaps that was not 'you'.

VN was decidedly cruel to this 'Lyuba Serafimovna Savich'. Do you suspect that he was referring to an actual woman, and do you also suspect that he may have been doing this to somehow placate and reassure his "first reader"?

pp. 83/84
 
StillILearn said:
Ooops. Perhaps that was not 'you'.

VN was decidedly cruel to this 'Lyuba Serafimovna Savich'. Do you suspect that he was referring to an actual woman, and do you also suspect that he may have been doing this to somehow placate and reassure his "first reader"?

pp. 83/84
Firstly....not "you". :eek:

As far as LSS ^, the impression I came away with was that the woman had taken the job as typist for Vadim because of an infatuation she carried for him, and VN was simply showing that this sort of thing did take place and was not reciprocated by the object of the "affection".
Actually Vadim treated the woman kindly, as kindly as you can treat a person like that without encouraging them. :rolleyes:

Vadim even does not describe their last meeting on account of not wanting to be "a cad", he could have been truely cruel and gone into detail about that.

That is just my take on the situation though. All throughout the story I don't remember Vadim being overtly cruel to anyone. Thoughtless sometimes, yes...even selfish, but not low down mean.
 
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