Gem said:
Hello,
I'll be going to the bookshop tomorrow possibly, I'll add it to the list
, any other Nabokov must reads I should have?
Gem,
Welcome to the club of how-do-I-pick-one?
Frankly, I have been wondering about an answer to that question ever since I have seen how many novels he has written. By now I have come to realize that they are all different and, at least IMO, all make enjoyable reading. So, in a sense I would suggest making the choice among his novels the same way you would choose among novels of any other author whom you like. But I know that sounds like such an enormous cop-out!
So let me offer what have been my own random approaches.
My own exceedingly well-read local bookstore owner once suggested
Vera by Stacy Shiff and I enjoyed it immensely. It is a biography of Nabokov's wife, a truly remarkable woman in herself, but more than that it is a wonderful and heart warming story of their devotion to each other and their long marriage together. IMO it rivals in truth whatever you will read in fiction anywhere. If you like love-stories, this is it! And it serves also as a good one-volume introduction to the man himself because he is never very far out of sight. So If you see
Vera, it's automatically worth picking up IMO.
His two greatest are said to be
Lolita (obviously) and
Pale Fire.
His four greatest round that out with the addition of
Pnin and
Ada, or Ardor, I believe.
His last two were
Transparent Things and
Look at the Harlequins, in that order.
So, if you wish to see and read the full flowering of his mature and dazzling talents those are the six.
Pnin is by far the story with one of the most easily likable of all his protagonists and the easiest to simply read along as a straightforward likable story. But we have also just seen
Sebastian Knight as a formidable story with extraordinary writing, so his supposedly "lesser" novels are not very lesser at all in my strong opinion.
If you think in terms of chronology, then
Mary is his first.
After having followed exactly that route in my purchases, I myself decided O heck! Might as well buy and read all of them! At that point I bought them by two's and three's, simply by reading the back-cover blurbs and picking the ones that sounded more interesting. (I was fortunate that my local Borders, both of them, stock all of them.YAY) Now I have all of them but two, (
Bend Sinister and
Invitation to a Beheading because I sincerely avoid politics) and have never regretted buying any of them.
If you'd like to know what's up next for discussion, I think the fair answer is I don't really know. I wouldn't mind hearing your suggestion(s) at all! Pick a new one for us by all means!
That doesn't narrow it down very much, I realize, but I hope it builds up your confidence that you can't go wrong and that you will (very probably) enjoy any one that you do see and purchase. So be brave!
Questions cheerfully answered,
And I envy you your prospective bookstore visit, :
Peder