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Yet More Nabokov
The Tragedy of Mister Morn, coming at you in March 2013. Anyone have any idea if this is any good?
For the first time in English, Vladimir Nabokov’s earliest major work, written when he was only twenty-four: his only full-length play, introduced and beautifully translated by Thomas Karshan and Anastasia Tolstoy.
The Tragedy of Mister Morn was written in the winter of 1923-1924, when Nabokov was completely unknown. The five-act play–the story of an incognito king whose love for the wife of a banished revolutionary brings on the chaos the king has fought to prevent–was never published in his lifetime and lay in manuscript until it appeared in a Russian literary journal in 1997. It is an astonishingly precocious work, in exquisite verse, touching for the first time on what would become this great writer’s major themes: intense sexual desire and jealousy, the elusiveness of happiness, the power of the imagination, and the eternal battle between truth and fantasy. The play is Nabokov’s major response to the Russian Revolution, which he had lived through, but it approaches the events of 1917 above all through the prism of Shakespearean tragedy.
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- Nabokov on Beckett's French From a nice essay on Beckett in the Boston Review: This thought coalesced into a conviction. Thereafter, Beckett, who so valued control over his work...
- On the Romantics Rooted in the humanist revolution of the Enlightenment, and more immediately in the writing of Wordsworth and Coleridge, the powers of artistic creation were, for...
- Nabokov Deserves Better I understand that at this point Dmitri has pretty much decided that it's his right to piss on his father's last wishes vis a vis...
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