Jansy
Mello: Alexey
furnishes a missing element for those who only read "Acapulco" in "Akapulkovo." So many
Nabokov's "fathers" exeunt a novel by means
of airplane disasters that I ceased to wonder about the mystery
related to each event. Demon is associated to the Gavailles
(Hawaii), whereas Mexico is present in "Lolita" from the very start. Ancient
territorial disputes are relocated in "Ada" and, aesthetically, there's a
kind of natural simmetry between Alasca and the Pacific side of Mexico
& the Russian and Spanish territories in America. D.H.Lawrence tried to recover his health in Mexico (a
distant link to "The Plumed Serpent" passes through RLSK's reference to a
priestly naiad and E.M.Forster's novels), whereas Leon Trotsky lost his
(STalin had him assassinated in his Mexican exile).
I wonder
if Andrea Pitzer's forthcoming book ("The Secret History of Vladimir Nabokov," in which "Nabokov emerges as a kind of documentary conjurer, spending the most
productive decades of his career recording a saga of forgotten concentration
camps and searing bigotry, from World War I to the Gulag and the
Holocaust.") we'll find news about airplanes, Mexico, Alaska or Russian
explorers.