MR: For me, Jansy's notion of
absence-as-presence seems most akin to my experience of the book. But I have
only read it cover-to-cover twice, and it may be that Suellen's more thorough
immersion in the book has revealed to her an actual presence that I have not
yet discerned. (Insert here VN's comments about the botanist specializing
in lilies.) When I mentioned accessing Lo's subjectivity, I was asking myself,
can I think as Dolores thinks? Can I know what she was thinking as these events
happened? For me, the answer is only 'yes' if I am speaking very generally--I
was once a child, so I can understand the tragedy of a broken childhood. I do
not, however, feel like I can get inside Dolores's mind to anywhere near the
extent that I can enter HH's.
SSH: absence-as presence is a very
Nabokovian notion, No? The sky BETWEEN the branches, the infinity of time BETWEEN
beats. No wonder then, that the “very poetic girl” in Lolita is
constructed of this dreamspace:>)