A while ago the Nabokov list took up the subject of comparison between
Joyce and Nabokov, which probably happens every so often. At the time,
I wanted to mention Martin Amis' PEN address, but memory failed me of
details. I'm currently writing an article in which I want to quote
that lecture, so I got around to looking it up. It' s available
online as a recording and as text at
http://martinamis.albion.edu/amisnabokov.htm
Here's a snip:
"Bookman Old StyleNabokov
wants to embrace his readers.... He comes across as this snorting
wizard of hauteur, but he is the dream host, always
giving us on our visits his best chair and his best wine. What would
Joyce do? Let's think, he would call out vaguely from the kitchen,
asking you to wait a couple of hours for the final fermentation of a
home-brewed punch made out of grenadine, conger eels and sheep
dip."
I recommend it. It's short, precise, and funny.
Tori
Victoria N. Alexander, Ph.D.
Dactyl Foundation for the Arts & Humanities
64 Grand Street
New York, NY 10013
212 219 2344
www.dactyl.org
Support the arts! Copy and paste the link below to donate to Dactyl
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On Aug 18, 2005, at 7:27 PM, Donald B. Johnson wrote:
EDNOTE. Sam Schuman is one of the founding members of the
Vladimir Nabokov
Society.
----------------------------------------------------------
----- Forwarded message from schumans@morris.umn.edu -----
Date: Thu, 18 Aug 2005 13:10:05 -0500
From: sam schuman <
Reply-To: sam schuman <
Subject: My first time with LOLITA
To: Vladimir Nabokov Forum
Like many another adolescent in the late 1950's my first time with
Lolita was a major disappointment: I was looking for a dirty book,
and only found a great one. My first serious encounter with the
novel came some years later, when I was teaching freshman composition
at Northwestern University, under the directorship of Alfred Appel.
My wife and young children and I spent a summer in Yorkshire, at the
home of another Northwestern colleague, and I picked up The Annotated
Lolita because I was curious about the scholarship of my supervisor.
A few days later, I finished the book, dashed to the local bookshop,
and purchased everything by Nabokov they had for sale.
--
Sam
Samuel Schuman
Chancellor
The University of Minnesota, Morris
Morris, MN 56267
schumans@morris.umn.edu
320-589-6020
----- End forwarded message -----
Like many another adolescent in the late 1950's my first time with
Lolita was a major disappointment: I was looking for a dirty book,
and only found a great one. My first serious encounter with the novel
came some years later, when I was teaching freshman composition at
Northwestern University, under the directorship of Alfred Appel. My
wife and young children and I spent a summer in Yorkshire, at the home
of another Northwestern colleague, and I picked up The Annotated
Lolita because I was curious about the scholarship of my supervisor.
A few days later, I finished the book, dashed to the local bookshop,
and purchased everything by Nabokov they had for sale.
--
Sam
Samuel Schuman
Chancellor
The University of Minnesota, Morris
Morris, MN 56267
schumans@morris.umn.edu
320-589-6020