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Click on the Google Preview image above to read some pages of this book!
Vladimir Nabokov's Lolita is a dark and daring story of
obsessive love and transgression. Humbert Humbert's lust for his
pubescent step-daughter, Lolita, shocked readers when it was first
published in the 1950s; yet the novel was also celebrated for its
beautifully lyrical writing. Almost fifty years after its first
publication, Lolita remains a powerful tale of perversion and
love gone wrong.
About The Author
Born in St. Petersburg in 1899, Vladimir Nabokov was the eldest son
of an aristocratic and culturally educated family. Russian, French and
English were spoken in the Nabokov household and as a child, Nabokov
read authors such as Poe, Melville and Flaubert. Following the
Bolshevik revolution, the Nabokovs moved to London before settling in
Berlin. Nabokov stayed in England to study at Trinity College Cambridge
where he completed his studies. He was married to his wife Vera in
1925. In the first twenty years of writing, Nabokov's writings were in
Russian and it was not until later that his works were translated; many
by his son Dimitri . In 1940 he moved with his wife and son to America
where he lectured at Wellesley College from 1941 to 1948 before filling
the post of professor of Russian literature at Cornell until 1959. His
first novel written in English was The Real Life of Sebastian Knight
written in 1941. Nabokov is arguably most famous for his 1955 novel
Lolita. As well as writing novels, Nabokov wrote works of non-fiction;
notably on Nikolai Gogol (1944) and Eugene Onegin (1964).
In an interview with Alfred Appel, Nabokov stated that 'the writer's
art is his real passport and not his nationality' and that he was 'an
American writer who has once been a Russian.' This reflects Nabokov as
a writer of great linguistic flexibility and suggests that the early
influence of foreign literature perpetuated throughout his life, giving
him the tools to portray ideas in different languages. The ideas are
the speakers in his work, not the language. This ability to disorganise
space is also reflected in Nabokov's own compositional style where he
purports in his early years as a writer to have constructed paragraphs
in his mind to be re-written later and, later on in his career, to
write sections on note cards to be later re-arranged and re-written;
the final work appearing as a sequence of mental spaces materialised on
paper.
Writers such as Martin Amis and Brian Boyd have positioned Nabokov
as one of the greatest writers of the century. Amis has commented that
'to read him in full flight is to experience stimulation that is at
once intellectual, imaginative and aesthetic, the nearest thing to pure
sensual pleasure that prose can offer.'
'Vladimir Nabokov was a literary genius' David Lodge, Guardian
'Even first time readers cannot fail to appreciate Nobokov's
marvellous and distinctive way with words' David Lodge, Guardian
Reviewed By The Booktopia Book Guru
Why Read Lolita?
Lolita is a book which both gains and suffers from a reputation for
being immoral.
It suffers because many people purchase the book for the wrong reasons.
They buy it for the smut. The truth is, there is no smut.
But Lolita gains, too. How so? Works of great literary merit are seldom
best sellers – they seldom make it onto the shelf of the average
reader. Without its bad reputation, its reputation for wickedness,
Lolita would not have gained access to the very people Nabokov intended
to stimulate - the great suburban mass.
Of course, many of these readers having searched desperately for the
dirty bits to no avail, abandon the attempt. But some are persuaded by
the prose, and it is sublime prose, to read on and on.
This audience could not have been reached without the court cases, the
press, the banning, the tut-tutting and the general hysteria caused by
the book’s plot. At the time, 1955, the Sunday Express editor damned
it, calling it “the filthiest book I have ever read” and “sheer
unrestrained pornography.” No wonder it sold well.
But that was in the 1950s, no one would find it offensive now – surely?
Penguin Books recently published Lolita in their Popular Penguin range.
You know the ones – the retro, orange covered Penguins you find in
bookshops and on display in Australia Post Shops. Well, Australia Post
had to remove Lolita from the displays, because of customer complaints.
What were they complaining about? Nothing real. Those who have not read
Lolita know that Lolita is a book about a grown man having sex with a
child. That is enough to damn it. Such logic would have us banning all
crime novels, all war novels… and, well, to be on the safe side – all
novels. (Really!? Do all novels promote and sanction the acts depicted
within them?)
Yes, Lolita is about a grown man’s infatuation with a young girl. But
it isn’t a Dummies guide to hebephilia. Lolita is about the damage this
infatuation causes. But it is also about unequal relations of every
kind and the damage these cause. It is about youth and age. It is about
mind and body. About thought and action. It is about the relationship
between the new world and the old – Europe and the USA.
When I read Lolita, it is about the relationship between knowledge and
ignorance or, put differently, experience and innocence.
I’m not going to deceive you, Lolita is a difficult book. It is many
layered, and it is complex. One reading will not do it justice, and you
become aware of this as you read it. Nabokov seems to be alerting us to
our intellectual deficiencies, pointing out the enormous gaps in our
knowledge. He wants us to go off to read, to learn, to become a reader
worthy of his book and the questions it raises.
As I said, it is a complex book. It is also an interesting book, a
rewarding book. And, for more reasons than the obvious, Lolita is a
challenging and disturbing book. It examines many of the preconceptions
that uphold the framework of our lives, finds them wanting and asks us
to establish better ones. Something we have still yet to do. Which is
why, ironically, Lolita can still cause a stir in the local Post Office.
ISBN: 9780141037431 ISBN-10: 0141037431
Number Of Pages: 372
Publisher: Penguin Books, Limited
Format:
Paperback
Language:
English
Dimensions (cm): 18.100 x 11.4
Weight (kg): 18.1
Audience:
General
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