Well, of course, who could disagree with Tom in a general way? But what if you're inside the Taj Mahal (or a beautiful maze) and can't find your way out? How then can you enjoy the overview? Might not an architect's drawings (or a map) be precisely what's needed? Anyhow, reading a novel doesn't have all that much in common with appreciating a view or a painting.

As for Stan's other point, it's not that we turn to fiction to learn anything new about, say, bad parenting. But we do generally hold fiction writers to certain standards of believability in depicting child-parent relationships. I don't see how anyone could deny that the following quotation from James Randi helps to suggest the depths of Hazel's estrangement from her parents:


Poltergeists usually show up in homes where a discontented adolescent lives, and the phenomena seem to take place only when that individual is present. When the discontent is relieved, the mischief ceases. It is interesting to note that in a significant percentage of these cases, the child is also adopted or living in a foster home.  --Randi, entry for "Poltergeist" in An Encyclopedia of Claims, Frauds, and Hoaxes of the Occult and Supernatural (1995).



Jim Twiggs
 


From: Stan <stan@BOOTLE.BIZ>
To: NABOKV-L@LISTSERV.UCSB.EDU
Sent: Wed, October 6, 2010 11:33:29 PM
Subject: Re: [NABOKV-L] THOUGHT: the whole codology

Bravissimo, Tom. Power to your pen.

Pale Fire is a damn fine read and finer re-read. Who could ask for anything more? ©  Ira Gershwin

Love the Higgs Boson quip, although, having studied the quirks of Quantum Mechanics (at Dirac’s alma mater), there are ineffable differences in finding the origins of mass, and determining if Pale Fire reveals anything we didn’t know about the After Life or the perils of poor parenting and pedantic Literary Criticism.

I’ve always thought it risky (but worthwhile) for authors to include a MAD character in their narratives. Whether the mad person is truly insane or just playing daft, the normal ‘contract’ between writer and reader is disturbed. I mean, the writer is free to invent abnormal utterances and actions, forcing us to suspend the judgments we apply to rational actors. We can’t tell if CK is delusional all or some of the time, or lying with sane motives (also known as CODDOLOGY; note spelling). Recall Polonius on Hamlet:
Though this be madness, yet there is method in't.

Stan Kelly-Bootle
http://queue.acm.org/detail.cfm?id=1864510

On 07/10/2010 03:47, "NABOKV-L" <NABOKV-L@HOLYCROSS.EDU> wrote:

Tom Rymour writes:
 
Dear All,

Re the hunt for codology in Pale Fire(AKA the Higgs boson of Nabokov  
studies) I recall a conversation with an academic in 1998. She was one of  
the three judges who had just seen fit to give me a literary award for a  
work of satirical fantasy. I asked her if she ever dabbled in fiction, and  
she said: "Good heavens, no!  there are only two kinds of people -- those  
who write and those who write about them. You're one and I'm the other.  
And if it wasn't for chaps like you, we'd have nothing to do!"

It strikes me that Old McNab has given an awful lot of people a great deal  
to be getting on with. Personally, I'm content to look at the Taj Mahal by  
moonlight, rather than pore over architectural drawings of it.


Hugs and kisses...

Tom (Rymour)
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Search the archive Contact the Editors Visit "Nabokov Online Journal"
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All private editorial communications, without exception, are read by both co-editors.