Think, Write, Speak: Uncollected Essays, Reviews, Interviews, and Letters to the Editor
L**N
Useful book by/about V. Nabkov, a genius author
It's a bit early for me to write a review of the book because it is rather a research than entertaining reading. But in general the book is valuable for a student of Vladimir Nabokov the writer and thinker. The book is thorougly edited and nicely produced.Lena Jacobson
S**D
Excellent companion to. Nabokov biography
The breadt of selections for this book allows one to see this writer from multiple angles. It is interesting to see his lancinating wit at work…and at play. His introduction to other authors, in commendation or condemnation, lets one seize a glimpse into his vast store of opinion snd information.
B**O
Excellent book, but what is up with that cover?
This is a wonderful book. The kind of book that you can pick up and open to any page and read something very interesting. However I must say the cover is absolutely awful. For such elegant writing the cover looks like it was a high school art project. Still highly recommended
T**G
Interesting, but sometimes tedious
I read "Think, Write, Speak" hoping to find some insights into "Lolita," which I'd recently reread. While the book delivers these both in the form of some interviewers' very perceptive questions and in Nabokov's possibly disingenuous answers, the side effect of hearing so much from Nabokov is that I ended up rather disliking him. He comes across as an overbearing and narcissistic control freak, obsessed with cultivating a very specific public image. He's sometimes rude to interviewers, is highly critical of most other writers and translators, finds the women's movement ridiculous, defends the American involvement in Vietnam, and is contemptuous of student movements. It gets tiresome and I began to wonder how his Véra tolerated it.His most interesting comment in regard to Lolita may be in his 1975 interview with Bernard Pivot on French television: "It's the imagination of the sad satyr that makes a magic creature of this little American schoolgirl, as banal and normal in her way as the poet manqué Humbert is in his. Outside the maniacal gaze of Humbert there is no nymphet. Lolita the nymphet exists only through the obsession that destroys Humbert."In a 1962 interview, Nabokov, asked whether the reader should take the duel between Humbert and Quilty seriously, replies, "Down with the serious and sincere reader. After all, not all readers are children who ask if the story is true." In that same year, he told another interlocutor, [Lolita] "is not humor. It's not a story. It's a poem." In a 1959 BBC radio interview, he said, [Lolita] "has no special purpose; it has no special message."Referring to the passage in the book where Humbert tracks down the now pregnant Mrs. Dolly Schiller, Nabokov comments, "She's not pretty any more, she's not graceful, she's going to have a baby, and it's now that he loves her. It's the great love scene. He says to her, "Leave your husband and come with me," and she doesn't understand. It's still his Lolita and he loves her very tenderly."In another interview, he offers, "In the end, Humbert realizes that he has destroyed Lolita's childhood and that makes him suffer. It's a work of pity... Humbert has confused morbid love and human love and he has remorse. So he understands why he is writing this book." Speaking with Alain Robbe-Grillet, one of the few modern French writers Nabokov admires, he says, "We know very little of Lolita's passion, but it's my hero at first who feels this sensual passion, this storm of sensations, and then at the end, so to speak, human and divine love. My hero renounces this passion, but although she's no longer a nymphet, she is now the love of his life."He also makes some interesting comments about the creative process. In character, he compares himself to God: "I suspect the Almighty's interest in Adam and Eve was neither very sincere nor very enduring, despite the success, on the whole, of a really marvelous job. I, too, am completely detached from my characters, while making them and after making them."On memory: "When you remember a thing, you never remember the thing itself, you remember the relation, the association of the thing with something else. And it's the imagination that makes this link between things."On reality: "I don't believe there's an objective reality. But the combinations the artist invents give or should give the reader the feeling not of average reality, but of a new reality distinctive to the work."On objects: "The nuance of a wave interests me as much as the girl drowning in it."On the pleasures of science: "Radiant silence at the bottom of a microscope."Fun discovery: The book includes Nabokov's reviews of books now forgotten and long out of print. One of the few interesting ones is about a persecuted Russian religious group called the Dukhobors. Tolstoy helped many of them find refuge in British Columbia, where they would protest against public education and military service by burning down their own homes and marching nude.
C**S
Volodya Redux
A feast of table scraps, some nutritious, justifying the cost of the meal:Cambridge (1921)Rupert Brooke (1921)Laughter and Dreams (1923)Painted Wood (1923)On Poetry (1924)Play: Breitendstrater-Paolino (1925)A few Words on the Wretchedness of Soviet Fiction and an Attempt to Determine Its Cause (1926)On Generalities (1926)A. Znosko-Borovsky, Capablanca and Alekhine (1927)Anniversary (1927)Vladislav Khodasevich, Collected Poems (1927)Man and Things (1928)On Opera (1828)Aleksey Remizov, The Star Above Stars (1928)In Memory of Yuli Aykhenvald (1928)Ivan Bunin, Selected Poems (1929)Alexander Kuprin, The Glade: Short Stories (1929)The Triumph of Virtue (1930)What Should Everyone Know? (1931)Writers and the Era (1931)Nina Berberova, The Last and the First (1931)In Memory of Amalia Fondaminsky (1937)Pushkin, or the True and the Seemingly True (1937)Diaghilev and a Disciple, (1940)Soviet Literature 1940, (1941)The Creative Writer, (1941)
J**O
Even More Nabokov
I think few Nabokov readers are not completists. Once you’ve come under the spell of his prose, there can be no end to you hunger for more Nabokov. I would welcome his grocery lists, if they’re ever made available!Until those grocery lists are available, you can make do with this comprehensive catalogue of previously uncollected early essays, reviews, and later, letters to editors, reviews, and brief and lengthy interviews.He never fails to entertain, and he wields the English language more beautifully than most native authors. The delights are endless!
B**R
scraping the bottom of the barrel
There's no bad Nabokov, but this is really shoe scrapings.
M**6
Never dull
Collected essays and interviews of a literary master dating back to the 20s. Never dull, always fascinating.