Nabokov

Was Albert Camus a better goalkeeper than George Orwell? Have your say here.
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k-j
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Sat Nov 14, 2009 4:43 am

An excellent piece on Nabokov by Martin Amis in The Guardian. I very much agree with Amis here. Nabokov's genius was like a titanic tropical flower that blossoms opulently before its lurid perfume becomes the stench of self-consumption and it collapses in on itself in a rotten welter of murk and corruption. They should have left Laura alone.
fine words butter no parsnips
David
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Sat Nov 14, 2009 10:21 am

This should be in today's Review, so I'll be reading it later. (No gardening today - it's peeing down. A wet and wintry Manx Saturday. I love them.)

I've never read any of Nab's novels - hang on, I tell a lie, I did read Pale Fire years ago, and really enjoyed it, but it's hardly a novel, as I remember, more an extended literary joke.

I have read some of the short stories, which supposedly show him at his best, and even them I wasn't wild about. I thought then - and I might go back and give them another go - that this was self-regarding prose, too ornate, too plush, too pleased with itself, preening itself in the mirrors of a fairly dubious gym.
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