LOLITA, the
novel by Vladimir Nabokov about a middle-aged
man’s infatuation with an underage girl, was
modelled on an abduction in 1940s America,
according to new research.
The plot for the book, published in 1955, was
based on the case of Sally Horner, a girl of 11
or 12 who was blackmailed into a sexual
relationship by a 50-year-old car mechanic, an
academic has found.
Both Lolita’s
appearance, and much of the plot, in which the
girl falls prey to Humbert Humbert, a
middle-aged academic who takes her on a road
trip across America, show close parallels with
the Horner case.
The findings are likely to stir debate among
Nabokov fans and scholars, who have suggested a
range of candidates for the “real Lolita”.
“It was in the sad story of the New Jersey
girl [Horner] that Nabokov found a psychological
explanation of Lolita’s acquiescence in her role
as sex slave,” said Alexander Dolinin, a
lecturer in Slavic literature at the University
of Wisconsin and author of several studies on
Nabokov. He describes his findings on the
sources of Lolita in last Friday’s edition of
The Times Literary Supplement.
Dolinin reached his conclusions after
researching local newspapers and newswire
reports from the 1940s and 1950s — the Horner
case was scarcely noticed by the national media
in America.
In 1948 Florence Sally Horner was abducted
and kept against her will by Frank La Salle, a
mechanic. After catching her stealing a
five-cent notebook in Camden, New Jersey, La
Salle told her he was an FBI agent and that if
she did not co-operate with him, “we have a
place for girls like you”.
Horner spent 21 months living and travelling
with La Salle before she confided her secret to
a friend in Dallas, Texas, where she attended
school.
She was found in California when she made a
phone call after managing to slip away from her
abductor.
La Salle was jailed for 30-35 years for
kidnapping in 1950. It was widely believed he
and Horner had had a sexual relationship and the
judge branded him a “moral leper”.
In the book Humbert, an academic, stays at
the house of Lolita’s mother and becomes
infatuated with the daughter. He persuades
Lolita to go away with him on a protracted road
trip around America after her mother’s death.
At one point in the book Humbert refers to
the Horner case by name when reflecting on his
behaviour. The full significance of this
reference has not previously been realised,
Dolinin argues. “The second part of Lolita
abounds with echoes of the Horner story,” said
Dolinin.
In both the press reports of the Horner case
and the novel, the girls are described as
“nice-looking youngsters”, are daughters of
widowed mothers and have brown hair. Lolita’s
“Florentine hands” and “Florentine breasts”
evoke Horner’s first name.
Both the reports and the novel refer to the
girls as “child bride” and “cross-country
slave”.
Other similarities include Humbert’s claims
that he is Lolita’s father, and the similar
duration of the pair’s sojourn together. Like
Horner, Lolita’s time with the older man ends
after a mysterious phone call.
The eventual fate of both girls was tragic.
In the novel, Lolita marries and flees to Alaska
with her new husband but dies in childbirth.
Horner was killed in a car accident in 1952.
A number of real-life models have been
offered up as possible Lolitas including Lita
Grey, who as a 15-year-old actress had sex with
Charlie Chaplin when he was 35.
Last year it was claimed Nabokov took the
idea for the story, which was filmed by
Hollywood in 1962 and 1997, from a 1916 novella
written by Heinz von Eschwege, a German writer,
in which the narrator is obsessed by a girl
called
Lolita.