Peder
Well-Known Member
Separately I have to remark that Sebastian was a writer, and what an opportunity that gives to VN for literary allusions, puns, creativity and assorted free word-play. The provide a seaprate topic-within-a-topic in the book and can really be enjoyed separately. The fun begins on p. 5
Think also of his conclusion to the interview with Herbert Gold (in Pifer's Lolita Casebook, p.206):
Peder
Nabokov couldn't resist twisting the tiger's tail in his own humorous way.Last winter at a literary lunch, in South Kensington, a celebrated old critic, whose brilliancy and learning I have always admired, was heard to remark as the talk fluttered around Sebastian Knight's untimely death: "Poor Knight! He really had two careers, the first -- a dull man writing broken English, the second -- a broken man writing dull English."
Think also of his conclusion to the interview with Herbert Gold (in Pifer's Lolita Casebook, p.206):
It would take a reader with a mordantly serious outlook to miss the humor in his conversational style.GOLD Are there significant diasadvantages to your present fame?
NABOKOV: Lolita is famous, not I. I am an obscure, doubly obscure, novelist with an unpronounceable name."
Peder